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Perceptions of Evil
A Comparison of Moral Perspectives in Nazi Propaganda and Anti-Nazi Literature
by
Hamish Inksetter
Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies in partial fulfilment
of the requirements for the MA degree in History
University of Ottawa
© Hamish Inksetter, Ottawa, Canada, 2015
Perceptions of Evil: A Comparison of Moral Perspectives in Nazi Propaganda and Anti-Nazi Literature
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Abstract
Perceptions of Evil: a comparison of moral perspectives in Nazi propaganda and antiNazi literature
By Hamish Inksetter
Supervised by Jan Grabowski
2014
This thesis examines how the concept of evil was understood by opposing German
perspectives during the era of National Socialist rule (1933-1945). The rise of Nazism in
Germany marked a period of massive political upheaval wherein the National Socialist
government encouraged the masses to view the world in terms of a great struggle between
forces of good and evil. This was the central theme of their propaganda, which zealously
encouraged racialist beliefs in the popular consciousness, and was based on assumptions
of German superiority and Jewish evil. Despite Hitler's apparent success in creating an
obedient nation, a significant number of Germans opposed his rule, amongst whom a
small group of writers expressed their discontent through creative fiction. Through a
comparison of the worldviews communicated through political propaganda and anti-Nazi
literature, it is revealed that the crux of the divide between their opposing perspectives
hinged on the meaning of evil.
Since evil is a concept with many meanings, this thesis approaches the subject
thematically. The comparison begins by focusing on the perception of evil as an allcorrupting force that had taken hold of Germany, followed by an exploration of how
power and brutality were understood, ending with a comparison of views on how the
struggle between good and evil took place on both a social and individual level.
In addition to demonstrating the subjectivity of moral perspective during a
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tumultuous period of the recent past, this research reveals how the struggle against
Nazism existed as a conflict of ideas. Moreover, the comparison of cultural sources
(including Nazi art, visual propaganda, written texts such as Mein Kampf, and anti-Nazi
creative fiction) demonstrates the value of art as a tool for conducting historical enquiry.
Since the legacy of the Third Reich continues to directly influence modern perceptions of
evil, exploring how evil was understood according to contemporary Germans – from both
pro and anti-Nazi perspectives – is of particular historical interest.
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Acknowledgements
I would like to acknowledge everyone who supported me throughout this project, and
express my deep feelings of gratitude for their advice and encouragement. Firstly, I would
like to thank Prof. Jan Grabowski for his expertise, patience and guidance in supervising
my research. I would also like to thank Prof. Heather Murray for her friendly advice and
help during the preliminary stages of my research. My humble appreciation is extend to
the University of Ottawa for standing as a pillar of learning and providing the facilities
for my study, and to everyone at the Canadian Heritage Information Network for
providing employment throughout my years of study. To my wife Laura, thank you for
everything, I could not have done it without you; you are the light at the end of the tunnel.
Thank you to my parents for supporting me through thick and thin, and for raising me
with an awareness of the world; I could not ask for better guides. Additional thanks to my
siblings: to my sister Meredith for her wisdom and constructive ridicule; and to my
brother Dylan for his friendship and stalwart good humour. Additional thanks are
extended to Chris Lindsay for giving me Hans Fallada's Every Man Dies Alone while I
was designing my proposal, and to historian Randal Bytwerk for hosting his archive of
primary sources online. A final word of thanks to my cats, Eli and Willow, who have
served admirably as desk-side companions through many long-nights of toil.
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Table of Contents
ii
Abstract
iv
Acknowledgements
v
Table of Contents
vii
List of Tables
1
2
5
8
12
13
16
19
INTRODUCTION
Historiography
Antisemitism and European racialist thought
Propaganda and culture during the Third Reich
Nazi theory and visual propaganda as primary sources
German literature and anti-Nazi authors
Literature as historical document
Approach
22
23
27
32
36
37
47
53
CHAPTER 1: THE ALL-ENCOMPASSING FORM OF EVIL
Nazi belief and the omnipresence of Jewish evil
Visual propaganda: the Jewish conspiracy in German political life
Visual propaganda: the Jewish conspiracy and Germany's struggle for survival
The anti-Nazi perspective: the Third Reich as an all-encompassing form of evil
The Rule of Lies and Inversion of Meaning between Good and Evil
Justice in the Third Reich
Conclusion
55
55
58
64
64
72
79
CHAPTER 2: POWER AND BRUTALITY
Natural law and the struggle for survival
Representing the master race
Power as an attribute to evil
The Nazi leadership
Powerlessness and Cruelty
Conclusion
81
81
82
88
92
96
102
104
105
110
116
120
123
127
129
CHAPTER 3: NAZISM AND THE STRUGGLE BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL
Visions of society in Nazi propaganda
The utopian dream of Nazism as a reflection of the people's will
Martial values: duty and the nobility of self-sacrifice
The Third Reich and the rebirth of Antiquity
The idea of defeat as a vision of apocalypse
Conclusion: the Nazi social view
Collaboration, subjugation, and resistance in anti-Nazi literature
The rise of Nazism as a product of historical context
Nature, and the inherent differences of 'German character'
Fear and intimidation
Denunciation, and the complicity of the masses with Nazism
The irrationality of the masses
Anti-Nazi resistance as a form of class warfare
Anti-Nazi resistance as an existential struggle
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138
140
145
148
The spiritual cost of collaboration
The 'true Nazi' as a figure of exceptional evil
Duty, self-destruction, and redemption
Disillusionment and the loss of personal agency
Conclusion
154
CHAPTER 4: CONCLUSION
165
Appendix A: Figures
176
Appendix B: Summary of Anti-Nazi Authors and Works
181
Bibliography
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List of Tables
63
Table 1: The Nazi perception of beauty according to natural law, race, and power.
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Introduction
Evil is a concept that has evolved through time with the rise and decline of every great
civilization, and affects our basic understanding of what it means to be human. Through
the intercession of moral judgement on an otherwise objective reality, the meaning of evil
also shapes our understanding of reality, which in turn influences perceptions of the past.
Since the biases of history have always used notions of evil to vilify the opposing forces
of any political conflict, it is essential to remain mindful of the differences in perspective
that inform how different groups are portrayed. This is particularly true of the Second
World War, which was driven largely by divergent ideological beliefs. In Germany alone,
political conflict between the fascists and their opponents had been intense throughout the
Nazis' rise to power, and would continue after 1933 until the end of Hitler's dictatorship.
Belief in evil as a real and immediate danger which threatened to overwhelm and
destroy society was an essential component of both the Nazi and anti-Nazi perspectives.
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the competing notions of good and evil that were
expressed through culture during the Third Reich, as revealed by Nazi propaganda and
anti-Nazi literary fiction. This comparison demonstrates that the conflict of worldviews
which existed between the Nazis and their literary opponents hinged on differences in
moral outlook, as opposed to political or ideological differences.
The racial component of the Nazi worldview, which stemmed from longestablished traditions in modern European thought, can be summarized as a belief that
race was the basis for humanity's struggle for survival, and that the Jews were an entirely
evil people whose sole ambition was for the enslavement of humanity. Thus, the National
Socialist movement was presented in its simplest terms as a struggle for survival between
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forces good and evil. By contrast, critics of Hitler's rule attributed the primary cause of
suffering in German society to the destructive effects of Nazi political extremism. Since
opposition stemmed from a variety of perspectives and took many forms, there is no
single ideological basis by which anti-Nazi feeling can be accurately summarized. By
focusing on anti-Nazi authors as a specific group in German society who made use of
literature as their mode of communication, a panorama of views that challenged the Nazi
perspective is revealed, demonstrating common themes that likened the struggle against
Nazism to a conflict between good and evil.
Historiography
In the domain of thought and feeling, the new extremes of modern warfare and the
horrors of genocide brought on by the Second World War had a profound impact on
human self-perception and the associated meaning of good and evil. An example of this
can be found in Hannah Arendt's influential work, Eichmann in Jerusalem (1964). Since
existing perceptions of human behaviour could not explain Nazi crimes adequately,
Arendt argues for the need to reexamine the meaning of evil.1 According to her view, the
perpetrators of Nazi crimes were predominantly ordinary men driven by banal motives,
such as the desire to succeed professionally and solve bureaucratic problems, and should
not be viewed as different from the rest of humanity for their supposed malevolence or
insanity. A more recent example which builds on Arednt's conclusions is found in Susan
Neiman's history of the philosophy of evil (Evil in Modern Thought). According to
Neiman, the existence of Auschwitz in modern times defied the limits of imagination and
1
Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (New York: Penguin Books, 1964), 272, 278-279.
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shattered pre-existing notions of humanity, indicating a fundamental flaw in Western
civilization.2 Accordingly, one of the most shocking revelations Neiman attributes to the
Holocaust is the capacity for ordinary people to willingly participate in genocide.3
The close association between modern perceptions of evil and atrocities
committed during the Second World War is also reflected in the historiography pertaining
to this era. A question that is central to many of the debates surrounding investigations
into Nazi crimes stems from an interest in evil, as the precise nature of guilt and the
motivation behind atrocities remain two of the most divisive issues. This is primarily
(though not exclusively) centred around the Holocaust, regarding which the Intentionalist
and Functionalist schools of thought are the two most prevalent. Intentionalist historians
view the Holocaust as a direct result of the Nazi leadership's plan to kill the Jews, and in
some cases blames the German people for adopting radical Antisemitism. Conversely,
Functionalist historians typically view responsibility for the Holocaust in broad terms as a
result of social context, and argue that its cause was primarily a result of the functionality
of the Nazi state as a system which had an enormous influence on the decision making
process of individuals.4
In relation to the meaning of evil, Intentionalist historians tend to assign guilt
more exclusively than their counterparts, an example of this being demonstrated by
historian Daniel Goldhagen in Hitler's Willing Executioners (1997). In this work,
Goldhagen examines one of the special police battalions who were responsible for
carrying out the execution of Jews during the early phases of the Holocaust, arguing that
2
3
4
Susan Neiman, Evil in Modern Thought: An Alternative History of Philosophy (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002),
252-262, 272-277.
Ibid, 238-252.
Richard Bessel, “Functionalists vs. Intentionalists: The Debate Twenty Years on or Whatever Happened to Functionalism and
Intentionalism?” German Studies Review , vol. 26, no. 1 (Feb., 2003): 15.
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for such perpetrators there were no moral obstacles to be overcome, and that ordinary
Germans were self-motivated to commit murder according to their deeply rooted belief in
“demonological Antisemitism.”5 This argument is in direct opposition to an earlier study
on the same group of perpetrators by historian Christopher Browning (Ordinary Men,
1992), in which he argues that individuals were often led to murder Jewish civilians
despite deep feelings of moral revulsion and without threat of real punishment. This, he
concludes, resulted from a variety of influences on individual behaviour, foremost
amongst which was the the social pressure to conform to group behaviour, to appear
manly and without weakness, and to aid one's comrades in carrying out orders.6
A crucial difference between these arguments hinges on their respective view of
the perpetrators as either ordinary or extraordinary men. While Goldhagen does not go so
far as to claim the perpetrators were simply demonic and evil, his analysis does run from
a premise that the Germans of the Third Reich were fundamentally different from the rest
of humanity.7 By contrast, Browning presents the perpetrators as ordinary men whose
decision making process was heavily influenced by their social context, with the
implication that any group of people placed under similar circumstances would behave
similarly.8
The differences between these views are also reflected in the primary sources used
for this research. While projections of the Nazi worldview reflect Goldhagen's argument
by demonstrating messages of deep and abiding hatred for Jews, the anti-Nazi worldview
5
6
7
8
Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust, (New York: Vintage Books, a
division of Random House Inc., 1997), 9-14, 392.
Christopher R. Browning, Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland, (New York: HarperCollins, 1998), 170-175.
Goldhagen, Hitler's Willing Executioners, 27-28.
Browning, Ordinary Men, 159.
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exhibited through literature lends support to Browning's arguments by suggesting
perpetrators were morally conflicted.
Though responding to the Intentionalist-Functionalist debate is not the primary
objective of this research, it is noteworthy that the historiographical legacy of Nazism is
intimately bound to the same questions of evil and human nature as were given
expression during Hitler's reign. Additionally, out of consideration for the historians who
refute Goldhagen's views9 and in agreement with the Functionalist school generally, this
thesis relies primarily on the writings of such historians as Hans Mommsen, Martin
Broszat, Hannah Arendt, Götz Aly, Robert Gellately, and Christopher Browning for
historical contextualization.
Antisemitism and European racialist thought
To examine the Nazi worldview, a background understanding of European racialist
thought is essential. As a system of beliefs, the emergence of Nazism was not a
spontaneous phenomenon; rather it was the result of a long progression in scientific,
political, and religious thought that drew on influences from across the European
continent.
According to George L. Moss' Towards the Final Solution, modern racism grew
out of the Enlightenment era's combination of scientific reason and Christian evangelism,
which gradually evolved towards Antisemitism, culminating with the Nazis and the
9
Christopher Browning criticizes Goldhagen for focusing on a limited view of the perpetrators to fit his arguments, for offering an
insufficient explanation for the Holocaust (that it was more than a matter of irrational Jew-hatred), and for underestimating the
coercive environment of a totalitarian dictatorship. Other historians, such as Alexander Groth, point out that Goldhagen's
arguments run the risk of demonizing the Germans to such a degree that he implies the rest of humanity was incapable of similar
acts. Christopher R. Browning, “Ordinary Men or Ordinary Germans,” Unwilling Germans: The Goldhagen Debate, (ed.) Robert
R. Shandley, translated by Jeremiah Riemer, Minneapolis (London: University of Minnesota Press, 1998), 55-66; Alexander J.
Groth, “Demonizing the Germans: Goldhagen and Gellately on Nazism,” The Political Science Reviewer, 118-119, (online)
http://www.mmisi.org/pr/32_01/groth.pdf (January 4, 2012).
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Holocaust. During the period of colonial expansion (from the 16th century to the late 19th
and early 20th centuries), it was not uncommon for Europeans to view indigenous nonWestern people with fascination as embodiments of a 'primitive' ideal that was supposedly
more natural, innocent, and noble than themselves; however, this soon gave way to
negative stereotypes of 'savages' and a return of focus to the classical age as the standard
for physical and moral ideals.10 Scientific studies of the physical differences between
races (pioneered by such notables as anatomist Peter Camper (1722-1789) and
physiognomist Johann Kaspar Lavater (1741-1801)) were based on subjective standards
of beauty for racial classification that drew inspiration from the art of antiquity; this
combination of aesthetics with science heightened the importance of outer appearances as
a measure of worth. An inadvertent contribution to race theory was made by Charles
Darwin (1809-1882), who introduced the concepts of natural selection and evolution, as
well as the idea of nature being governed by an all-encompassing struggle for survival.11
This, in conjunction with Sir Francis Galton’s (1822-1911) theory of “eugenic worth,”12
set the stage for 'social Darwinism' and modern ‘scientific’ racism in Europe.13
Another characteristic of race theory leading towards Nazism was the addition of
mystical qualities to perceptions of race, which emerged out of 19th century attempts to
define national characters. Conservative advocate Comte Arthur de Gobineau (18161882) contributed significantly to this field by reinterpreting studies of linguistics and
anthropology to present race as the determining factor in the past, present, and future of
10 George L. Mosse, Toward the Final Solution: A History of European Racism, (New York: Howard Fertig, 1997), 8-11.
11 Charles Darwin, “On the Races of Man,” The Descent of Man and Selections in Relation to Sex, 2nd ed., (London: J. Murray, 1901,
Online), 169-185.
12 Eugenics: the idea that desirable or undesirable human traits could be passed on by one generation to another.
13 Mosse, Toward the Final Solution, 22-26, 72-75; Francis Galton, “Eugenics, its Definition, Scope and Aims,” Essays in Eugenics,
(London: The Eugenics Education Society, 1909), 35-43.
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civilization.14 In conjunction with this, newly formed nation-states searched their histories
for common roots in order to build their national identity, resulting in the emergence of
'outsiders' whose 'race' did not belong. In addition, the mythic character of race was
furthered significantly by the pan-Slavic and pan-Germanic movements, which, during
the 19th and early 20th centuries, made use of national mythologies as a basis for
imperialist expansion.15
The drive for national identity and centrality of race led some to theorize that it
was the governing factor behind all human relations, including Comte Georges Vacher de
Lapouge (1854-1936). He venerated Greek (specifically Spartan) culture as the ideal
society, basing much of his reasoning on physical traits, and applied the Darwinian logic
of natural selection to human beings, concluding with an apocalyptic view of the future in
which the physically and spiritually inferior Jews fatally undermined the Aryans16 through
racial contamination. Another advocate of this view was Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels (18741954), a Viennese publicist who advocated for the initiation of human breeding programs
to create an Aryan super race, as well as the extermination or enslavement of the lesser
'animalistic' peoples. These expressions of modern racism combined the scientific
concepts of racial biology with the mysticism of the evangelist, spiritualist, and mythicnationalist movements of the late 19th century, and were the direct predecessors to
Nazism.17
Antisemitism itself has a long and complicated history, and many of the modern
14 Comte Arthur de Gobineau, “The Inequality of Races,” Selected Political Writings, (ed.) Michael D. Biddiss, (London: Jonathan
Cape, 109-143.
15 Mosse, Toward the Final Solution, 48-54; Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, (New York: Schocken Books, 2004),
291, 300-302, 306, 312.
16 A term with various meanings, 'Aryan' is used here to refer to Hitler's Nordic-inspired physical ideal of blond, strong, tall, blueeyed, and fair-skinned Caucasians.
17 Mosse, Toward the Final Solution, 58-61, 94-95, 99.
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themes linking Jews to evil stemmed from medieval fears which were adapted in the 19th
century to reflect modern anxieties. One of the most common fears utilized by the Nazis
was the supposed international Jewish conspiracy which blamed the Jews for all-manner
of anxieties linked to modern society.18
Social resentment against the Jews was aggravated when economic hardships and
financial scandals inspired a rise in anti-banking sentiment that was easily transferred to
the Jews. Hannah Arendt argues that the Jews were hated for possessing undeserved
wealth, an idea passed on from their historic role as financial backers to the nobility, a
function which had diminished significantly since industrialization resulting in a
contemptuous perception of the Jews as social parasites who did not deserve their
wealth.19
This tradition of European racialist thought was essential to the development of
the Nazi worldview, without which their notions of Antisemitism, Aryan supremacy,
natural law, and race struggle could not have existed. Moreover, the basis in scientific
study from which modern racism sprang lent Nazi propagandists an appearance of
legitimacy in the public eye.
Propaganda and culture during the Third Reich
Propaganda was an essential component of the Third Reich, and serves as material
evidence of the Nazis worldview. The importance of propaganda to Hitler's strategy is
reflected through his pronouncement in Mein Kampf that the first task of the Party
18 Ibid, 113-118, 152-153.
19 Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 12-14, 26, 32-33, 51, 74-76.
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organization was to spread propaganda in order to produce more supporters.20 Though
Hitler bore considerable contempt for the masses, he also recognized the necessity of
earning their support, and to this end, controlling information and the means of public
communication was key.21 Shortly after Hitler's rise to power, the German free press was
purged of supposed dissidents and brought under the collective control of the state
Propaganda Ministry, which issued news directives and ready-made opinions at daily
press conferences. Under Hitler's guidance, Nazi propagandists appropriated existing
institutions and spread their Party's ideology using every available mode of
communication (including: newspapers, magazines, public wall posters, film, literature,
visual art, radio, and educational materials). Hitler's chief propagandist, Joseph Goebbels,
was placed at the head of the Reich Ministry for People's Enlightenment and Propaganda,
and had thousands of employees as well as dozens of branch offices under his control.
Otto Dietricht, who was notable for the frequency of his direct communication with
Hitler, was another prominent propagandist in charge of Germany's National News
Agency, and often came into conflict with Goebbels.22
The intended outcome of the Nazi propaganda campaign was to control the
opinion and attitude of the masses to the extent that they should demonstrate absolute
obedience and feel justified in carrying out political actions for the state. Political theorist
Jacques Ellul observes that creating justifications for action was one of the primary
functions of propaganda, to the extent that it amounted to a refusal by the propagandist to
20 Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, John Chamberlain (et. al.), (New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1940), 851.
21 Hitler demonstrated a sophisticated understanding of how to manipulate public opinion, and set many of the guidelines for his
propagandists to follow, including the importance of appealing to emotion over reason, of favouring the use of simple phrases over
complex political concepts concepts, of the importance of message repetition, and of framing propaganda in the right context (that
their own propaganda was a form of 'education' and good, while enemy propaganda was 'agitation' and bad.) Randal Bytwerk,
Bending Spines: The Propaganda of Nazi Germany and the German Democratic Republic, (East Lansing: Michigan State
University Press, 2004), 42-43.
22 Ibid, 18, 24-25, 59-64.
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admit the possibility of being wrong. This also served to nullify the anxiety of
responsibility attached to freedom of choice by fostering in the public an impression that
there was only a single course of action for them to follow.23
According to Ellul, the ultimate goal of propagandists during the Third Reich was
to achieve “total propaganda,” which entails a system of complete control over all forms
of media and communication, leaving “no part of the intellectual or emotional life
alone.”24 With total propaganda, public opinion becomes 'crystalized' as a fixed or
standard mode of thought, in which all forms of nuance and variety in opinion gradually
fade.25 To achieve this end, a diversity of propaganda sources would be required, even
when the underlying meaning of those sources were the same.26
This included cultural works, such as art, architecture, literature and film. As a
special form of sociological propaganda, these types of media had the potential to act as a
major influence on public opinion by strategically encouraging the masses to adopt ideas
and attitudes that matched the political interests of the state. In this way, Ellul describes
cultural propaganda as covert in form and general in focus, helping to establish the
pretext for Nazi rule and conditioning the public to accept Party demands.27
The appropriation of culture by the Nazi state followed a similar process as had
occurred with Germany's news-media, enforcing obedience and excluding or repressing
'undesirable' artists from professional life. This was achieved through the Party's control
over professional employment in Germany's cultural sphere by requiring membership in
23 Jacques Ellul, Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes, trans. Konrad Kellen and Jean Lerner, (New York: Vintage Books,
a division of Random House, 1973), 155-159.
24 Ibid, 9-10.
25 Ibid, 204-205.
26 Ibid, 102-104.
27 Ibid, 15, 64-66.
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the Reichskulturkammer (Reich Chamber of Culture, established in 1933 under the
authority of Joseph Goebbels to deal specifically with the arts and cultural media). This
enabled the Party to selectively eliminate undesirable artists from their respective fields.
Additionally, conservative artistic societies – such as the German Art Society and the
Combat League for German Culture – aided in the process of cultural Nazification by
promoting traditional motifs as 'true art' and combating the influence of modernism.
Before 1933, German art had been diverse and internally competitive, but after Nazism's
intrusion into cultural life, much of the richness and diversity of German culture faded.28
The appropriation of art was presented by the state as a defence of classical
ideals,29 a fact which was reflected in Nazi art that adopted Greco-Roman themes. At the
same time, modernist artists were condemned as degenerate, and their works were used as
evidence of the corruption that had befallen society. Hitler felt that a total purge of culture
from its 'non-German' elements was a necessity for the creation of a pure Germanic
utopia.30 In the struggle between races for survival, culture was to function as a key
indicator of racial worth, demonstrating a people's relative value as culture bearers
(Europeans), culture founders (Germans), or culture destroyers (Jews).31 Of Jewish artists,
Hitler argued their talent was only evidence of trickery, that their race was incapable of
creating 'true art', and that the Jews were responsible for all forms of cultural
degradation.32
28 Alan E. Steinweis, “The Nazi Purge of German Artistic and Cultural Life,” Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany, eds. Robert
Gellately and Nathan Stolzfus, (New Jersey; Oxfordshire (UK): Princeton University Press, 2001), 100-103.
29 As Hitler states: "The struggle that rages today involves very great aims: a culture fights for its existence, which combines
millenniums and embraces Hellenism and Germany together." (Quoted in) George L. Mosse, Nazi Culture: Intellectual, Cultural,
and Social Life in the Third Reich, (New York: Grosset & Dunlop, 1968), 11.
30 Hitler states: “This cleansing of our culture must be extended to all fields. Theatre, art, literature, cinema, posters, and window
displays must be cleansed of all manifestations of our rotting world and placed in the service of a moral, political and cultural
idea.” (Quoted in) J. A. Mangan, “Icon of Monumental Brutality: Art and the Aryan Man,” Shaping the Superman: Fascist Body
as Political Icon, (London; Portland: Frank Cass, 1999), 130.
31 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 398.
32 Adolf Hitler, (November 5, 1941), Hitler's Table Talk, 1941-1944, His Private Conversations, New Updated Edition, eds. H. R.
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Nazi theory and visual propaganda as primary sources
The selection of sources for this research was conducted with the aim of
contrasting Nazi and anti-Nazi perspectives using similar modes of expression. To
demonstrate the Nazi worldview, this thesis draws from a combination of theory and
visual propaganda. Accordingly, the writings and statements of Adolf Hitler and Joseph
Goebbels are heavily relied upon as two of the Party's leading theoreticians. In
conjunction with this, visual Propaganda is used as a reflection of Nazi ideals, including
such examples as the documentary-style films of Leni Riefenstahl, the sculptural works of
Arno Breker and Josef Thorak, the paintings of Adolf Ziegler, and the portrayals of 'evil'
in the public news media, including illustrations, cartoons, and public news-posters.
Visual propaganda was a preferred medium for Nazi propagandists because it was
readily available to the masses through public display and was capable of expressing
complex meanings in an appealing simplified form. As a result of these considerations, art
and culture were drawn into the Nazis' race struggle as a tool for furthering the
Nationalist cause, and as a reflection of their greatest concerns.33 The use of visual
propaganda as a source has the advantage of adopting the same media for historical
analysis which was used to influence German audiences during Hitler's reign. However, it
is important to distinguish the ideas presented through propaganda from the real motives
of contemporary people, which were not necessarily the same.34 Since a primary objective
of propaganda was to establish in the public a set of desirable preconditioned responses
Tevor-Roper and Gerhard L. Weinberg, trans. Norman Cameron and R. H. Stevens, (New York: Enigma Books, 2008), 91.
33 Jeffery Herf, The Jewish Enemy: Nazi Propaganda During World War II and the Holocaust, (Cambridge, Mass.; London,
England: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2006), 29-33.
34 As an example of this concern, Christopher Browning mentions ideological propaganda as a likely influence on the behaviour of
Holocaust perpetrators, but questions the degree to which it had real impact on the decisions being made by individuals,
concluding that if ideological propaganda did have a direct impact, it would have been but one of several contributing factors.
Browning, Ordinary Men, 159-175.
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that corresponded to political objectives, its function can be understood as the fabrication
of motive by the state, but the degree of its success is the subject of debate. In this vein,
propaganda should be interpreted according to various levels of meaning, including the
“usual meaning” (propaganda's overt properties), the “intended meaning” (what message
the propagandist wanted to convey), and the “comprehended meaning” (how propaganda
was understood by its audience).35 Since this research is primarily concerned with the
Nazis' worldview, analysis has focused on the the intended and usual meanings of
propaganda.
German literature and anti-Nazi authors
In opposition to the Nazi worldview are the anti-Nazi authors who managed to
give voice to criticism through works of literary fiction. For these writers, the context of
Germany's cultural appropriation by the state was a key influence on their vision of
society.
The appropriation of literature was just one part of Germany's Nazification, which
began with massive purges of 'undesirable' authors and intellectuals from professional
life. Academic Antisemitism actually preceded Hitler's acquisition of power, with over
three quarters of Prussian university students voting in 1927 to form a university
government that strictly excluded non-Aryans.36 The 'cleansing' of German literature
reached a climax during the massive public book burning demonstrations of April 20 –
May 10, 1933. The burnings, which accompanied a purge of academic staff, were carried
35 Alexander L. George, Propaganda Analysis: The Study of Inferences Made From Propaganda in WWII, (Evanston, Ill.: Row,
Peterson, 1959), 77, 107-115.
36 Roland Taylor, Literature and Society in Germany 1918-1945, Brighton, (Sussex; Totowa, New Jersey: The Harvester Press;
Barnes & Noble Books, 1980), 28.
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out in front of university libraries across Germany with apparent festive enthusiasm.37
They were carefully orchestrated affairs, involving ritualistic declarations by students as
books were added to the fire in a symbolic gesture of German cultural purification.38
Marxist writers were driven from literary occupations by anti-communist laws
implemented following the Reichstag fire, which also abolished constitutional rights and
led to the arrest of nearly 5000 supposed dissidents.39 Jews were steadily driven from their
professions everywhere, culminating in the 1935 Law for the Protection of German Blood
and German Honour, which brought writers, publishers, book shops, and libraries under
national control and excluded Jews from related fields of employment.40
The purge of literature was accompanied by efforts to draw respected German
authors into the Nazi organizational fold. For example, after dissidents were removed
from the Prussian Academy of Arts (including its director, Heinrich Mann), the remaining
twenty-seven governing members were asked to sign declarations of loyalty, amongst
whom eighteen complied.41 Other institutions were combined into the newly established
Reichsschrifttumskammer (one of seven departments in Joseph Goebbels' Reich Chamber
of Culture), including the Börsenverein für den deutschen Buchhandel and Reich
Association of German Writers.42
In addition to gaining control over authors, the Nazis attempted to use literature as
37 J. M. Ritchie, German Literature under National Socialism, (London; Canberra; Totowa NJ: Croom Helm and Barnes & Noble
Books, 1983), 66-69.
38 A few examples of the declarations that accompanied book burnings: “Against class struggle and materialism, for solidarity of the
people and an idealistic outlook on life! I surrender to the flames the writings of Marx and Kautsky [...] Against the overevaluation of instinctual urges that destroy the soul, for the nobility of the soul! I surrender to the flames the writings of Sigmund
Freud [...] Against literary betrayal of the soldiers of the World War, for the education of the people in the spirit of truthfulness! I
surrender to the flames the writings of Erich Maria Remarque.” Egbert Krispyn, Anti-Nazi Writers in Exile, (Athens, GA:
University of Georgia Press, 1978), 21.
39 Ibid, 16-17.
40 Ritchie, German Literature under National Socialism, 65.
41 Krispyn, Anti-Nazi Writers in Exile, 14, 18.
42 Ritchie, German Literature under National Socialism, 71.
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a form of propaganda to demonstrate the cultural tenacity of the new Germany. This aim
was never fully achieved, for pro-Nazi literature never blossomed as an art the way
authorities might have hoped. For this reason, the Nazis (and Hitler in particular)
regarded literature with disdain as the product of intellectuals who were out of touch with
reality, and viewed it in general terms as an inferior form of propaganda.43
In response to the repression of literature in Germany, many of the nation's most
respected authors fled into exile.44 The flight from Germany presented an enormous
challenge to authors who were not only separated from the security of their professional
lives and family, but from the German-speaking readers they depended on.45 Because
these authors were widely dispersed, most were not able to collaborate with each other
and faced the struggles of life in exile alone.46 Despite considerable hardship, they were at
least able to write with relative freedom and managed to produce a number of highly
critical anti-Nazi works.
For authors who remained in Germany, the alternatives to producing propaganda
literature included strict neutrality, silence, or “inner-emigration.”47 Some of these authors
sought to subvert the system of censorship by writing coded social criticisms using vague
references and suggested meanings; what literary historian Egbert Krispyn calls the
43 As an example, Hitler writes: “For let it be said to all knights of the pen and to all the political dandies, especially of today: the
greatest changes in this world have never yet been brought about by a goose quill! [...] the power which set the greatest historical
avalanches of political and religious nature sliding was, from the beginning of time, the magic force of the spoken word alone [...]
[as opposed to] the lemonade-like outpourings of aestheticizing literati and drawing-room heroes.” Hitler, Mein Kampf, 136.
44 Krispyn, Anti-Nazi Writers in Exile, 19.
45 After the war, famed author Golo Mann described the unique nature of this challenge, stating: "Science is international. So are
commerce and trade in general, but literature is closely bound up with one's language and the innumerable experiences and
references attached to that language." Golo Mann, “Exile and the Present Day,” Exile Literature 1933-1945, (Bad Godesberg: Inter
Nationes, 1968), 37.
46 An example can be found in the contrast between two schools of thought: Dutch writer Menno ter Braak argued that exiles should
be politically engaged and write more than pleasing literature, while on the other hand, author Ludwig Marcuse argued it was
pointless to advocate for authors to act or write in a particular way, because they were not a unified movement and could only act
according to the allowances of their individual circumstances. Krispyn, Anti-Nazi Writers in Exile, 37-39.
47 A term coined by author Frank Thiess to describe the intellectual attempt to maintain one's spiritual integrity by deliberately
retreating from the contemporary world as a result of one's inability or unwillingness to emigrate after 1933. Taylor, Literature
and Society in Germany 1918-1945, 266.
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“slave language” of the inner-emigrants.48 The problem here was that the hidden
meanings had to be hinted at with enough subtlety to pass the scrutiny of Nazi censors,
yet remain clear to a reading audience. As a result, non-exile authors were accused after
the war of falsifying or exaggerating their claims of covert opposition. In return, exile
writers were criticized for not understanding the true reality of life under Nazi rule.49
Despite their disunity, moral objections against Nazism were widely shared in all
segments of the anti-Nazi literary world, including exiles, non-exiles, socialists,
conservatives, Jews, and non-Jews alike. The critical worldviews of authors were
exhibited through their works, and because Hitler's reign had upset the lives of so many, a
considerable portion of their creative efforts were directed against his regime. Just as the
world conflict with Nazism developed politically, Hitler's Third Reich was challenged in
the literary world by a diversity of writers who did not share his vision, and in this way,
anti-Nazi literature should be viewed as a form of resistance.
Literature as historical document
The portrayal of Nazism in literature is a subject with its own historiography
which draws from the related controversies surrounding artistic depictions of the
Holocaust. A leading voice in this discourse is that of cultural theorist Theodor Adorno,
whose famous statement, “to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric,” reflects a belief
that art was incapable of representing the true nature of Nazi crimes. According to this
view, artists who depicted such atrocities as the Holocaust ran the risk of exploiting
48 Krispyn, Anti-Nazi Writers in Exile, 114.
49 Ibid, 151-155.
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victims by applying invented meanings to the suffering of others.50 By contrast, JewishItalian Holocaust survivor, Primo Levi, viewed the task of 'bearing witness' to the past as
an obligation for survivors of genocide, despite the inherent failings of imagination and
memory that impedes our ability to accurately represent the past.51
The problem posed by literature as a corrupting influence on memory is given
focus by historian Saul Friedländer, who argues that depictions of the Third Reich
appearing in post-war German literature had begun to rewrite the historical narrative in a
more bearable light that shifted responsibility away from perpetrators. Specifically,
Friedländer takes issue with the heroic Frontkämpfer archetype of post-war German
fiction, which contrasts the stalwart and un-ideological Wehrmacht soldier against the evil
Waffen-SS, a paradigm which overlooks much of the involvement of the German army in
atrocities. Also at issue is the equivocation of Nazi crimes with Allied atrocities, such as
those committed by the Red Army or the bombing of German cities. During the Cold War,
such narratives served to shift responsibility away from the Germans to the Bolsheviks,
who were burdened with responsible for having invented modern political extremism.52
Regarding the distinction between narrative fiction and actual witness testimony,
James E. Young argues that since all reconstructions of the past are “inevitably
fictionalized by any narrative that gives them form,” it is possible for documentary fiction
to impart the same evidence as witness testimony, and that the difference between
narrative types is primarily one of form. Nevertheless, he also notes that the difference
50 Theodor Adorno, “Commitment,” Art in Theory, 1900-2000: An Anthology of Changing Ideas, eds. Charles Harrison and Paul
Wood, (Malden MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2003), 779-780.
51 (Cited in) Nancy Wood, “The Holocaust: Historical Memories and Contemporary Identities,” Media, Culture & Society, (July
1991), 13 (3), 363.
52 Saul Friedländer, “Historical Writing and the Memory of the Holocaust,” Writing and the Holocaust, ed. Berel Lang, (New York:
Homes & Meier, 1988), 72-75.
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between literary forms is of great significance, because what is remembered hinges on
how it is represented.53 Taking a broad view human culture, theorist Raymond Williams
argues that literature and all forms of art should be considered foremost as a type of
specialized communication ideally suited to expressing ideas about certain facets of
reality, and should not be regarded as special in relation to other types of
communication.54
In approaching literary sources for this thesis, creative fiction is regarded
primarily as a form of communication that seeks to document aspects of reality that were
of particular importance to authors, and is used to explore how life in the Third Reich was
understood according to contemporary Germans. Literature also provides a suitable
contrast to Nazi propaganda, which, like the ideas imparted through creative fiction, was
the product of a critically engaged and subjective worldview. In this way, anti-Nazi
literature can be compared with Nazi sources as a competing form of propaganda, though
literature lacked the organizational structure and means of production provided to Nazi
propagandists. In principle, both perspectives were responding against perceived
injustices that were thought to be responsible for causing hardship in German society, and
sought to promote a specific system of values as their remedy.
In examining the anti-Nazi perspective, the literary output of fourteen writers are
examined, including fourteen novels, four plays, four short stories, and one novella. The
scope of these sources is defined by the ability and need of authors to create critical
works, most of which were created during Hitler's reign. Several, however, were
53 James E. Young, “Holocaust Documentary Fiction: The Novelist as Eyewitness,” Writing and the Holocaust, ed. Berel Lang,
(New York: Homes & Meier, 1988), 211-213.
54 Williams argues that the influence of organization and tradition have made art into an an incredibly complex system of meanings,
which in all its forms (literature, dance, music, architecture, visual art, film, etc.) remain tied to the sphere of communication.
Raymond Williams, The Long Revolution, revised edition, (New York: Harper & Row, 1966), 22-24, 34.
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produced following the collapse of the Third Reich, extending as far as 1950; these
sources were included in research out of consideration for the difficulties authors faced in
producing material and having them published within the same time-frame as the Nazi
regime.
For the analysis of sources, special consideration was made for the individual
circumstances under which authors produced their works. The immediate context of a
sources could have a significant impact on its form and content, as exhibited by the
differences between exile and non-exile literature. While the purpose of this thesis is not
to describe the biographical background of individual authors' lives, such details as
upbringing, political orientation, relation to the Nazi Party, religious belief, and gender
could have a significant impact on the meaning invested into works.
Approach
In approaching examples of Nazi propaganda and anti-Nazi literature as historical
documents, it is the aim of this thesis to identify how sources demonstrate historical
worldview, how these worldviews compare against each other, and where the focus of
conflict between them resides. Each chapter consists of a comparison based on specified
themes relating to the meaning of evil, with the aim of demonstrating the similarities and
differences between them in terms of form and meaning.
The first chapter examines how notions of evil can be directed towards entirely
different subjects, yet relate to common fears. This is demonstrated through the
perception of evil as an intangible all-corrupting force that permeates society. In anti-Nazi
literature, this relates to the Nazification of Germany and the spread of ideology which
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resulted in a corruption of basic notions of moral decency. The parallel Nazi perspective
identifies a similar form of evil through the omnipresence of the 'Jewish conspiracy',
which derived its power from lies and corrupted society at all levels. Though each
worldview identifies an entirely dissimilar source of evil, the similarities in form suggest
an underlying common ground of moral belief between Nazi supporters and their
opponents, with which both perspectives sought to communicate.
Chapter two highlights differences in worldview through the examination of a
subject that is common to both perspectives, focusing on how power in the Third Reich
was perceived and represented. The anti-Nazi view identifies the power of the state as a
key attribute of evil in the Third Reich, which was overwhelming, totally corrupt, and
responsible for enormous pain and suffering. This theme is situated in relation to the
historical context of Hitler's ascent to power, the cult of supporters who celebrated his
image, the Nazis' brutal repression of opposition, and the widespread persecution of
'outsiders'. In contrast, the Nazi perspective demonstrates an admiration for strength as
the one true measure of human worth, and accepts brutality as a honest reflection of
natural law. While the power of the Third Reich appears in anti-Nazi literature as the
purest embodiment of evil, the Nazi view regarded that same power as critical to holding
evil at bay and preserving the race.
In chapter three, focus shifts to the impact of Nazism on German society, and pays
particular attention to the motives of ordinary people as supporters or opponents of
Hitler's regime. While anti-Nazi literature identifies the factors which led ordinary people
to overcome their moral objections and lend support to the regime, the Nazi perspective
presents the various reasons why the masses should want to lend their support voluntarily
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based on the nobility and justice of their cause. Conversely, resistance against evil is
presented by authors as a personal struggle for individual freedom, or by propagandists as
a collective struggle to prevent mass-annihilation in the event of military defeat.
Conclusions drawn from these comparisons show that between the differing
perspectives of state propaganda and narrative fiction, perceptions of good and evil were
the central issues of conflict between Nazi and anti-Nazi worldviews. By focusing on the
political ideas and perceptions of humanity that were manifested through cultural works,
the intellectual conflict that surrounded the Nazi movement is revealed as a moral
disagreement between the advocates and opponents of National Socialism.
As with any historical investigation, there are obstacles and limitations which have
hindered this research. Foremost amongst these has been my lack German language skills.
For this reason, I have been forced to rely on works which exist in an English translated
format, and to take into consideration the variations which can occur between an original
work and its translation, particularly with regards to style. Additionally, some works I
knew to be valuable could only be found in their original German format, such as Anna
Gmeyner's Manja, and Klaus Mann's Der Vulkan. There is an enormous amount of
research which can still be done on this topic for which a proper grasp of the German
language would be an enormous asset.
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CHAPTER 1
The All-Encompassing Form of Evil
After Adolf Hitler was elected Reich Chancellor of Germany in 1933, the Weimar
Republic came to an end and German society became dominated by the extreme ideology
of the National Socialist worldview. To Hitler, the Jews were responsible for society's
every hardship, and his 1933 political victory was presented accordingly as a triumph of
good over evil. In relation to this view, propaganda played a key role in the success of the
Nazi state, which through its combination with brute force enabled the new government
to silence criticism and procure mass obedience to great effect.
It is with regard to this stifling of opposition that the views of Anti-Nazi authors
are of significance. Though the impact of their literature on Germany was minimal due to
heavy censorship, they provide a glimpse into the worldview of individual Germans who
opposed the Nazi regime during the 1930s and 40s. Despite the fact authors represent a
great variety of differing perceptions, a common characteristic of their criticism holds the
Nazis responsible for the complete corruption of Germany's basic values. Nazism is
presented in these terms as an all-encompassing threat that accosted the individual
psychologically (or spiritually) as well as physically.
For both the Nazi and anti-Nazi sources, evil was presented as an allencompassing force that entirely saturated society, yet remained hidden from public
awareness. For the Nazis, this was represented by the 'international Jewish conspiracy',
against which they declared it was their mission to spread Antisemitic belief and expose
the Jewish menace before public scrutiny. Conversely, anti-Nazi authors took aim at the
intangible threats posed by the Nazis, and attributed them with an unprecedented capacity
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to influence thought and distort truth, culminating in the complete perversion of justice
and inversion of meaning between good and evil. Both Nazi propagandists and anti-Nazi
authors present the root of their struggle as a conflict of beliefs in which the meaning of
evil played a key role.
Nazi belief and the omnipresence of Jewish evil
In both visual and written propaganda, there is a consistent preoccupation in Nazi
ideology with the problem of evil as it relates to the menace of the supposed 'international
Jewish conspiracy'. In many respects, the Nazi worldview was centred on the Jews, who
were presented as an all-pervasive, entirely corrupt, and innately evil menace. Since the
Jews were said to be masters of deception and camouflage, it was argued that visual
propaganda was essential to the Nazis' effort of exposing the monstrous 'true form' of
Jewish evil.
The Ideology of Antisemitism
Compared with other revolutionary political movements, Nazi ideology was
relatively simplistic. Besides their racialist beliefs, ardent nationalism, and celebration of
'volkish' traditions, their movement was driven largely by the will of Adolf Hitler.55 This
does not mean ideology was unimportant to the Nazis, but rather, that the strength of
National Socialism relied heavily on the charisma and beliefs of its leader.56
55 Martin Broszat, The Hitler State: The Foundation and Development of the Internal Structure of the Third Reich, trans. John W.
Hiden, (New York: Longman Group, 1981), 29.
56 Martin Broszat suggests this weak ideology and central unity based on Hitler's character was the reason the National Socialist
movement was more unified and less prone to 'splitting' than its Marxist and Socialist competitors.
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Hitler believed human beings were governed by unalterable laws of nature, as
reflected through racial stereotypes and the parallels drawn between humans and the
behaviour of animals. According to this view, every race was inferior to the Europeans, of
whom the tall, blond, blue-eyed 'Aryans' were the natural elite. While other races such as
Slavs, Arabs, Africans, and Asians were regarded as simply inferior, the Jews held a
special place in the hierarchy as both the lowliest and most evil of all races.57
Since the Jews were blamed for virtually every problem facing modern society,
the precise reason for the Nazis' hatred is difficult to define, though the essence of their
fear can be reduced to their belief in the Jews' racially motivated desire to destroy
civilization. According to Hitler, this was the result of three inherent characteristics: the
Jews were the weakest of races (which forced them to survive as parasites off the labour
of other peoples); they were the most cunning of races (which made them naturally gifted
as exploiters); and they were the most selfish and malevolent of all races (which made
them destructive and drove them to hate all other peoples).58 The reason these traits were
not immediately visible to the public reflects Hitler's belief in the Jews' ability to mask
their 'true' racial identity behind the veil of a religious community; accordingly, it was
argued that the “great lie” of Judaism was the Jewish religion itself.59
As an extension of their racial flaws, the Jews were said to operate a vast
international conspiracy with the objective of world domination. The broad political
57 It is worth noting that with regards to the Nazis' perception of evil, the Jews were not the only hated race. The Russians and Slavic
peoples were viewed with comparable animosity as racially and culturally inferior. Hitler claimed that these people were incpaable
of creative thought and were entirely uncivilized, and were thus a great threat to European culture. For this reason, a special
department called the Gesamtverband Deutscher Antikommunisticher Vereinigungen was created with the specific task of
spreading anti-Soviet propaganda. Hitler, Hitler's Table Talk, 33, 140-141; Lorna L. Waddington, “The Anti-Komintern and Nazi
Anti-Bolshevik Propaganda in the 1930s,” Journal of Contemporary History, vol. 42, no. 4 (Oct., 2007), Sage Publications, Ltd,
576-577.
58 Hitler states: “[...] the instigators of this national illness must have been devils incarnate; only in the brains of a monster – not in
the brains of a human being – could the plan for an organization take shape and meaning, an organization whose activity must lead
to the ultimate collapse of human culture and with it the devastation of the world.” Hitle, Mein Kampf 82-83.
59 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 313, 420-421.
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context of Germany's economic and political status was presented in these terms as part of
a centuries-old race struggle wherein the Jews were responsible for every form of
hardship. Overthrowing the Jews and preventing them from inflicting further harm was
thus a central concern of Nazi ideology. Since the Jews were said to threaten all humanity,
Hitler treated their persecution as a gift to the civilized world:
If our people and our State falls victim to this bloodthirsty and money-thirsty Jewish tyrant over
nations, then the whole world will fall into this polyp's net; if Germany frees itself from this
embrace, this greatest of all dangers to the nations can be regarded as crushed for the entire
world.60
The rise of Hitler and the events of the Second World War were narrated by propagandists
in these terms as part of a great struggle between good and evil. Germany acted as the
defender of Western civilization and strove to bring order to the world by reestablishing
racial purity through cultural cleansing, the strict regulation of sex and marriage, and
ultimately through the 'final solution' of removing the Jewish presence from the European
continent.
An additional element of the supposed Jewish threat was its link to Marxism, as
Hitler made repeatedly clear in Mein Kampf:
Understanding Jewry alone is the key to comprehension of the inner, the real, intention of Social
Democracy. He who knows this race will raise the veil of false conceptions, and out of the mist and
fog of empty social phrases there rises the grinning, ugly face of Marxism.61
This relation was key, for it combined the imaginary Jewish enemy with something
tangible, powerful, and threatening; the Nazis owed much of their support to anticommunist fears, and it was essential that the Jewish conspiracy be viewed in this light as
synonymous with Marxism. The communists and Bolshevik Russians in particular figured
prominently in Nazism's pantheon of enemies, but always as an extension of the Jewish
60 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 906.
61 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 66.
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conspiracy.
Hitler's Antisemitism has been assessed by some historians as a pretext for other
motives, such as a desire to win the masses through an appeal to their anti-Jewish
sentiments, or as an extension of extreme nationalism, or as a convenient scapegoat for
Germany's problems. However, according to Hannah Arendt, these interpretations only
give a partial explanation for why Antisemitism was so crucial to the Nazi movement.62
While the true reasons for Antisemitism are debatable, it can be seen that the Jews stood
for absolute evil in the Nazis' system of beliefs, and were an essential component of their
complex and mystical worldview.63
Another key attribute of the Jewish threat was its invisibility. The Jews were
presented as masters of disguise who advanced themselves through trickery, attacked with
misleading propaganda, and used the power of wealth to exert their influence. According
to propaganda, they represented a threat whose presence was everywhere, but everywhere
remained unseen; a 1943 proclamation by Joseph Goebbels64 illustrates this paranoid fear:
Who among us had any idea that the enemy was beside him, that a silent or clever auditor was
attending to conversations on the street, in the subway, or in the lines outside cigarette shops?
There are Jews one cannot recognize by external signs. These are the most dangerous. [...] The
enemy is in our midst. What makes more sense than to at least make this plainly visible to our
citizens?65
Hitler's own 'discovery' of the Jewish world conspiracy is described in Mein Kampf as a
62 Hannah Arendt examines these explanations critically: as a political tool for winning some of the masses Antisemitism was a
useful but not all-encompassing feeling that at times had to be moderated to enhance the Party's broad appeal; the nationalist
character of Nazism cannot be denied, but the movement was envisioned to be a supranational coalition in its fully evolved form,
and cannot be viewed for this reason as exclusively nationalist; and finally, the scapegoat argument is true in that the Jews were a
minority who lacked power and were burdened with blame and guilt, but because their selection was informed by a complex
history of racism, they were not arbitrary victims, and Arendt suggests another group could not have stood in for their role. Arendt,
The Origins of Totalitarianism, (New York: Schocken Books, 2004), 11-16.
63 As Hitler states: “he [the Jew] is the inexorable and mortal enemy of all light, the despiser of all true culture.” Hitler, Mein Kampf,
434.
64 Joseph Goebbels (1897-1945) was head of several important cultural institutions including the Reich Ministry for People's
Enlightenment and Propaganda. Bytwerk, Bending Spines, 60-63.
65 Joseph Goebbels, “Die Juden sind schuld!” (The Jews aer Guilty!), Das eherne Herz, (Munich: Zentralverlag der NSDAP, 1943),
85-91, accessed online, http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/goeb1.htm (August 1, 2013), page copyright © 1998 by Randall
Bytwerk.
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nightmarish realization in which the corrupting Jewish presence is seen clearly for the
first time, appearing within German society like a cancerous tumour.66 The Jews were
presented in this way as responsible for every hardship, yet they remained devilishly
hidden from view. This was a carefully crafted perception that the Nazis wanted the
public to adopt.
In order to spread Antisemitism, the German public would first have to be
conditioned to accept its principles, as Hitler made clear:
In the year 1918 there was absolutely no systematic Antisemitism. I still recall the difficulties
which one ran into the minute one used the word Jew. One met either a dumb stare or experienced
the most violent opposition. Our first endeavours to show the real enemy to the public then seemed
almost hopeless and only very slowly did things begin to turn for the better. 67
After 1933, one of the first strategies adopted by the Nazis to encourage discrimination
against the Jews was to make them stand out from the rest of society through
distinguishable badges and compulsory laws of self-identification. In a proclamation,
Goebbels presented this as a public health and safety measure:
We wanted to make them visible as Jews, particularly if they made even the least attempt to harm
the German community. It is a remarkably humane measure on our part, a hygienic and
prophylactic measure to be sure that the Jew cannot infiltrate our ranks unseen to sow discord.68
Even with these measures, the 'true form' of Jewish evil remained hidden from public
view, and it was thus the task of visual propaganda to give form to this imaginary evil.
Visual propaganda: the Jewish conspiracy in German political life
The task of spreading Antisemitism fell to the Party's chief propagandists, Joseph
Goebbels and Otto Dietricht.69 Though Goebbels is considered the most important
66
67
68
69
Hitler, Mein Kampf, 75-77.
Hitler, Mein Kampf, 824.
Goebbels, “Die Juden sind schuld!” (The Jews aer Guilty!)
Otto Dietricht (1897-1952) retained control of the Deutsches Nachrichtenbüro (National News Agency). Bytwerk, Bending
Spines, 64-66.
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propagandist in the Third Reich, Dietricht was given personal directives by the Führer
and was primarily responsible for many of the public news posters which gave visual
form to the Party's Antisemitic fears.70 Another significant figure was Julius Streicher
(1885-1946), whose infamous Der Stürmer printed some of the most radical Antisemitic
images to emerge during the Nazi era (though his readership was smaller than that of
Goebbels or Dietricht).71
Since an important facet of Germany's racial purification extended to the cultural
sphere,72 images of Jews could only be produced using 'low art' forms, such as magazine
illustrations, political cartoons, and public news posters. This was to spare Germany's
'high art' from further corruption. In visual propaganda, Jews appeared in a wide variety
of forms, each relating to specific areas of concern. Each image format offered distinct
strengths; while magazine illustrations could be mass-produced for readers to examine in
private, news-posters were an effective format for strategically targeting Germany's urban
crowds. The intention of visual propaganda was to convey the essentials of an idea in a
simplified eye-catching form, as described through a Nazi instructional pamphlet:
The effect of the picture poster lies with its capacity to be understood at a glance, to get across the
spiritual attitude instantly, whereas the text poster needs a certain time to read and a longer time to
think about. The hurried city-dweller does not have much time. Mostly, he only catches a quick
look at a poster while walking past. The picture has to instantly say at a glance everything that a
longer text poster says.73
For the most effective visual propaganda, images were designed to aim for the optimum
balance between complexity and simplicity in their symbolic meaning, communicating
the greatest amount of information to the broadest audience with the least effort of
70 Herf, The Jewish Enemy, 13.
71 Ibid, 35.
72 Hitler makes special mention of his disgust at seeing evidence of the Jews' corrupting presence in the cultural domain: “Was there
any form of filth or profligacy, above all in cultural life, in which at least one Jew did not participate? When carefully cutting open
such a growth, one could find a little Jew, blinded by the sudden light, like a maggot in a rotting corpse.” Hitler, Mein Kampf, 75.
73 G. Stark, “Moderne politische Propaganda,” [Pamphlet], Munich: Verlag Frz. Eher Nachf., 1930, accessed online,
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/stark.htm. (August 1, 2013), page copyright © 1998 by Randall Bytwerk.
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interpretation.
Regarding their goal of exposing the Jewish conspiracy, one prominent theme of
Nazi propaganda reinforced the idea that the Jews were not really Germans. This is
illustrated by a Der Stürmer cartoon (fig.1) in which the speaker at a Jewish congress
declares: “Let the Goyim believe that we can be Americans, Englishmen, Germans, or
French. When our interests are at stake, we are always Jews, and nothing but.” The
intended meaning of this cartoon was to illustrate the international character of the Jewish
conspiracy, and to show their supposed lack of nationalist loyalty. In this vein, Hitler
believed the Jews could never form their own state because they were loyal only to their
race and could not perform honest work.74 Instead, Hitler believed the Jews lived as
parasites off the fruits of other people's labour, with the ultimate goal of their
enslavement.
The Jews' transition from parasite to master was a key aspect of the Antisemitic
conspiracy theory. This was was envisioned as a process of social change, beginning with
Jewish emancipation and the overthrow of the aristocracy using the bourgeoisie.
Afterwards, the implementation of democracy and capitalism would undermine society
through the inflated importance of wealth and the weakening of political leadership. The
last stage would see a “final revolution” during which the “the democratic national Jew”
would be revealed in their true form as “the blood Jew and the people's tyrant.”75 This was
also a direct reference to the Bolshevik Revolution, which was portrayed through
propaganda as an overt example of the Jewish conspiracy seizing power. The association
74 Adolf Hitler, Hitler’s second book: The unpublished sequel to Mein Kampf, ed. Gerhard L. Weinberg, trans. Krista Smith, (New
York: Enigma Books, 2003), 230.
75 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 435-436, 440, 450.
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between the Jews and the communist threat also made their conspiracy seem more
tangible, and was used to justify the German invasion of the Soviet Union.76
'International Jewry' was blamed for every traumatic episode of Germany's recent
past, which, in addition to the Bolshevik Revolution, included the 1929 economic crash,
the military defeat of 1918, and even the long era of disunity that preceded German
unification.77 Most contemporary political affairs were presented by propagandists
through this lens of Antisemitic fear, constructing a vision of a world overrun by Jewish
meddling. Visual propaganda capitalized on this belief during the Second World War
when the enemies of Germany were depicted as victims of the international Jewish
conspiracy (fig.2-3).78 Another illustration of this is found in one of Der Stürmer's war-era
cartoons titled “Pressure from Above,” (fig.4) which depicts the Allied leadership in a
hierarchy of command with an unnamed Jewish figure at the top. This also reflects
Hitler's professed belief that Joseph Stalin, Winston Churchill, and Franklin D. Roosevelt
were puppets to the Jewish conspiracy, and that the people of the Allied nations were the
unwitting slaves of Jewish masters.79 In this way, the Nazis portrayed the Jews as a real
political player that should be feared and hated, despite their supposed weakness and
inferiority.80
The Jews' ability to dominate political affairs was also attributed to their control of
information, primarily through the means of deceitful propaganda. An image illustrating
of this belief features a hook-nosed face with a flood of monsters pouring out from its
76 Herf, The Jewish Enemy, 90-91.
77 Herf, The Jewish Enemy, 3-4; Hitler, Mein Kampf, 826.
78 In one image, a great tentacled creature with a Jewish face entangles representative caricatures of the Allied nations. In another,
they appear nailed down like insects to a Star of David.
79 Hitler, (October, 1941 and January 7, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 57, 145.
80 Hitler, Meicn Kampf, 828, 906-907.
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open mouth (fig.5). This hellish image reflects how propagandists wanted the Jews to be
seen as the masters of deception who nurtured discord between nations with the intention
of provoking wars. This was an especially useful premise for the Nazis, for any
antagonism between Germany and its neighbours, including enemy propaganda, could be
attributed to the Jewish plot.
Antisemitism became an incredibly useful tool for the Nazis, since any enemy and
every hardship could be attributed to the same source; it did not matter how distinct
enemies might appear, they could always be linked to the Jews. A 1944 proclamation by
Joseph Goebbels illustrates this point, as he describes how capitalism and communism
were each players in the Jewish plot:
Plutocracy and Bolshevism spring from the same roots of a period of liberal-democratic decline.
They may differ in nuance, but in essentials they are the same. [...] They do not want order among
the peoples of the world. They both depend on disorder, anarchy, and chaos. They seek them
because they can only draw their infernal power for evil and destruction from those sources. Jewry
has two ways to gain and maintain power over unified peoples: international capitalism and
international Bolshevism. The one is the more radical brother of the other. Their lust for power is
limitless. Whenever they cannot reach their goal by the usual means, they seek to introduce
conditions of hopelessness and desperation in which they can sow their seed.81
The multifaceted character of this ideologically crafted form of evil was treated in
visual propaganda with an innovative technique that combined the various components of
enemy signifiers into a single composite form. A poster from 1938, titled Entarte Musik
(fig.6), advertising an exhibition of degenerate music, exemplifies this technique by
featuring an African musician playing a saxophone (an allusion to American jazz culture),
a Star of David on the musician's lapel (indicating Judaism), a red background
(suggesting communism), and a tuxedo suit (signifying capitalism). In addition to
demonstrating the Nazis' focus on German culture, this image reflects the element of their
81
Joseph Goebbels, “Die Krise Europas” (The European Crisis), Der steile Aufstieg (Munich: Franz Eher, 1944), 205-212, accessed
online: http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/goeb72.htm (August 1, 2013), page copyright © 1998 by Randall Bytwerk.
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worldview which wove all of their 'enemies' together into a single narrative, despite
emanating from distinct and arguably unrelated sources.82
The Jews were a perfect enemy for Nazi propagandists; they were present
everywhere yet remained invisible, and any argument against Antisemitism could be used
as further evidence of the Jewish conspiracy. Since the Jews played a part in everything
that opposed the Third Reich, all of Germany's enemies were the same in essence. Also in
these terms, anyone could be implicated as part of the Jewish conspiracy and an enemy of
the race. This notion that all the enemies of Germany were part of a vast Jewish
conspiracy was essential to the Nazis' ideological worldview, and was maintained through
propaganda until the very end of Hitler's reign.
Visual propaganda: the Jewish conspiracy and Germany's struggle for survival
The Antisemitic propaganda narrative was not only concerned with political
themes of war and diplomacy. The Jewish conspiracy was used to explain a whole host of
social problems, including Germany's moral degradation and the collapse of the economy.
Since the end of the First World War, economic instability had been a constant
source of anxiety for millions of Germans, and was an enormous factor influencing public
opinion at the time of Hitler's election to power. Financial stress also provided a very
important window of opportunity for propagandists who blamed the Jews for every
manner of economic hardship. Lingering hatred of the Versailles treaty was linked to the
Jews, as illustrated through a 1929 Der Stürmer cartoon depicting the German economy
as a wounded patient in the murderous care of an evil Jewish doctor (fig.7). The blood
82 Kristen Williams Backer, “Kultur-Terror: The Composite Monster in Nazi Visual Propaganada,” Monsters and the Monstrous:
Myths and Metaphors of Enduring Evil, ed. Niall Scott, (Amsterdam, NY; New York: Rodopi, 2007), 91.
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soaked patient is wrapped in bandages bearing the names of various treaties, and the
stereotypical Jewish doctor states, “I can give him another injection. In the state he's in,
he won't notice anything at all.” In addition to reflecting the Antisemitic fear of Jewish
doctors, the intention of this image was to link the Jews to the defeat of 1918 and
Germany's ongoing financial problems. In another illustration (bearing the simple caption
of “Fatherland!”), Jewish business owners are depicted benefiting from the financial ruin
of Aryan Germans (fig.8)83, and in a third image, the Jews are shown as the parasites
within Germany's weakened economy (fig.9).84
While the negative association between Jews and money can be traced back to the
medieval period, the Nazis were primarily focused on linking Jews to anti-capitalist
sentiment in the modern era. The logic of their thought maintained that, because the Jews
were weaker as a race, their success depended on other sources of power, namely wealth.
Accordingly, capitalism was presented through propaganda as part of the Jewish
conspiracy to weaken the German people in preparation for a Jewish take-over. An image
depicting this belief shows a monstrous Jewish caricature clutching a sack of money and
inhaling an assortment of figures (a monarch, an artist, a general, etc.), which suggests
not only Jewish greed, but the power of Jewish capital to dominate society (fig.10).
Though Germany's financial ruin was presented as a key objective of the Jewish
conspiracy, an even greater threat was posed by the prospect of race contamination. To
address this fear, visual propaganda took aim at women whose role as carriers of
Germanic blood was put in jeopardy whenever they consorted with Jews.
83 In the two-panelled cartoon, Jewish businesses prosper while a German family is forced to emigrate.
84 A worm-ridden apple stands as a metaphor for Jewish corruption, where the worm is used to indicate the Jewish influence on the
economy. A knife with a swastika bearing down on the parasite suggests the level of force the Nazis believed would be necessary
to remove the Jews.
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Regarding courtship and romance, the Jews were criticized in visual propaganda
for being lecherous and exploitative towards women. This is demonstrated in a political
cartoon from Der Stürmer titled Jewish Culture where the different courtship rituals of
Aryan and Jewish men are compared (fig.11). While the proper courtship rituals are
shown involving a conservatively dressed man and woman sitting in a serene pastoral
landscape, the Jewish method depicts a man and woman sitting together at a pornographic
film. Another illustration which bears the caption “the beginning and the end” (fig.12),
shows the shameful fate of a 'modern' woman who is degraded and turned into a prostitute
after her encounter with a Jew. In addition to showing the corruption of women caused by
Jewish men, an overt aim of these images was to link the Jews to the worst traits of urban
modernity. The liberated avant-garde culture of the Weimar Republic, though celebrated
in progressive circles as a period of innovation and creativity, was also subject to a
conservative backlash, which the Nazis actively supported.85
The seduction of women by Jews was presented as an extremely serious problem,
and propaganda sought to shame Aryan women for having relations with Jews, as well as
warn about the consequences of racial mixing. This is further illustrated through an image
titled Legion of Shame (fig.13), in which a monstrous Jewish figure looms over a crowd
of disgraced and weeping women, sprinkling coins on their heads. The caption reads:
“Ignorant, lured by gold – They stand disgraced in Judah's fold. Souls poisoned, blood
infected – Disaster broods in their wombs.” The “disaster” of mixed-race relations
resulted from the fact any Jewish progeny would inherit the 'evil' of Jewishness. This idea
is carried further in an image titled The curse is in the blood (fig.14), wherein a group of
85 For further discussion of the Nazis' adoption of Classical motifs, see page 92.
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stereotyped Jewish men crowd around a hook-nosed baby accompanied by the caption,
“Every little Jewish baby grows up to be a Jew.”
Race contamination was presented by propagandists as a strategic part of the
Jewish conspiracy that amounted to an assault on the very essence of the German people.
This, in combination with their supposed mastery of camouflage and deceit, as well as
their powers of wealth and political influence, amounted to an image of the Jews as an
all-encompassing force of evil, and the fate of humanity depended on revealing their
conspiracy to the world and crushing it with every available means.
The ghoulish and ridiculous rendition of Jewish figures in these political cartoons
was part of a well-developed propaganda campaign to strategically vilify Jewishness, and
drew artistic inspiration from the effective propaganda techniques used by some of the
Nazis' competitors during the Weimar era.86 Though the German public was not wholly
favourable towards such obvious exaggerations as those found in Streicher's Der Stürmer,
Hitler defended these as truthful depictions, stating: “Streicher is reproached for his
Stürmer. The truth is the opposite of what people say: he idealized the Jew. The Jew is
baser, fiercer, more diabolical than Streicher depicted.”87
That the Jewish conspiracy was imaginary only made belief in Antisemitism a
more powerful weapon, as it lent the Nazis the creative freedom to stand opposed to
something which existed only as they invented it. In this capacity, visual propaganda
played an important role in making the Jewish menace seem more realistic by lending it a
tangible form. Regardless of whether the Nazi worldview was shared by the masses or
not, the propaganda narrative created its own reality by nurturing an atmosphere of fear
86 Herf, The Jewish Enemy, 32-33.
87 Hitler, (December 28, 1941), Hitler's Table Talk, 118.
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and paranoia which encouraged Germans to either accept the Nazis as protectors or obey
them as oppressors.
The anti-Nazi perspective: the Third Reich as an all-encompassing form of evil
While anti-Nazi authors did not share a common ideology against which Nazism
can be compared, the reoccurring themes that appear within the limited scope of the
literary sources used for this research can be regarded as stemming from a common set of
values or beliefs that, when viewed collectively, constitute an anti-Nazi worldview. As a
contrast to the Nazis' Antisemitic beliefs, a persistent theme of criticism appearing in
literature takes aim at the atmosphere of corruption brought to Germany as a result of
Nazi rule. This is approached through literary examinations of the political rhetoric and
propaganda of the Third Reich, as well as the hypocrisy of Nazi justice. In this regard, the
collective vision presented by anti-Nazi authors amounts to a perception that all sense of
morality had been fundamentally altered in the corrupting atmosphere of the Nazi state,
that good and evil had switched places under the influence of Germany's new masters,
and that the consciousness of the German public had been enslaved by the poisonous
influence of Nazism. While this perception is entirely distinct from Antisemitism, the
anti-Nazi worldview mirrors Nazi ideology through its focus on evil as an entirely
corrupting and all-encompassing threat that remained hidden from public view, even as it
drove to dominate the masses.
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The Rule of Lies and Inversion of Meaning between Good and Evil
More than the use of force it remains the lie and corruption of 'goodness' that
stands out as the overarching evil which defines Nazism in its broadest terms. An
example of this is found in Lion Feuchtwanger's88 1934 novel, The Oppermanns,89 which
focuses heavily on the problem of Antisemitism but attributes much of the underlying evil
of the Third Reich to its manipulation of information. The novel tells the story of a
fictional middle-class Jewish family living in Berlin at the beginning of the Third Reich
who try to live a normal life despite escalating levels of fear, hysteria, and violence.
Feuchtwanger presents the Nazis as masters of deceit who rule through their use of lies,
and whose only true feeling was hatred, as he writes:
Inconsistency and deceit were the underlying characteristics of all the actions of their leaders.
Their speech was deceitful and so was their silence. They got up with a lie and they went to sleep
with a lie. Their discipline was a lie, their code of laws a lie, their judgements a lie, their German a
lie, their science a lie, their sense of justice and their faith were lies. Their nationalism, their
socialism were lies, their ethical philosophy was a lie, and so was their love. Everything was a lie,
only one thing about them was genuine: their Hate!90
The Nazis are presented in this way as liars who embraced deception as a matter of
principle, and link it to their sense of racial superiority in the form of “Nordic cunning.”
Thus, lies were instrumental to the Nazi strategy for success, as Feuchtwanger writes:
[...] the Leader, in solemn, extravagantly sentimental speeches, asserted that the Reich was keeping
strictly to the terms of the treaties and wanted nothing but peace. It was explained to the people,
with many sly winks, that these speeches by the Leader were designed only to deceived the stupid
foreigners, so that warlike preparations could go on undisturbed. The ultimate noble purpose
sanctified this “play acting” born of “Nordic cunning.” Such were the attempts made by the
88 Lion Feuchtwanger (1884-1858) was a German-Jewish author and playwright who was heavily critical of Hitler and the Nazi
Party several years before they gained power. After 1933 he fled to France where he was briefly interned before continuing his
flight to the United States. He remained productive and critical throughout the period of Hitler's rule, and collaborated briefly with
other anti-Nazi writers. F.S. Grosshut, “Lion Feuchtwanger and the Historical Novel,” Books Abroad , vol. 34, no. 1 (Winter,
1960), 9-12.
89 First published in 1934, Lion Feuchtwanger's The Oppermanns is the story of a fictional German-Jewish family living in Berlin
during the transition from the Weimar Repulic to the Third Reich. Of the works studied for this thesis, this novel offers the most
direct commentary on Antisemitism. The Oppermanns are meant to portray a typical Jewish family, the principle characters being
Gustav (an academic and cultured man), Martin (a business man and furniture store owner), and Berthold (a teenage student);
together their lives reflect the hardships faced by Jews during this era. As a commentary on the contemporary social environment,
portrayals of various collaborators, opportunists, and ideological Nazis are also included. In designing the Nazis, the author notes
in the preface that he drew inspiration from Hitler's Mein Kampf.
90 Lion Feuchtwanger, The Oppermanns, (New York: Sun Dial Press, Inc., 1939, first published in 1934 by Viking Press), 346.
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government to unite sixty-five millions of human beings in an association dedicated to sly winks
and deceitful cunning.91
In The Oppermanns, the greatest threat posed by the state relates to this rulership of lies,
which envelopes the German people entirely works to enslave their minds through
propaganda. Feuchtwanger writes:
[...] the fog of deception was spreading more and more densely over Germany. The Reich was
hermetically sealed, cut off from the rest of the world, completely abandoned to the lies which the
Nationalist's daily disseminated through millions of loudspeakers and printed pages. They had
created a special ministry for the purpose. All the methods at the disposal of modern technique
were employed to suggest to the hungry that they were fed, to the oppressed that they were free, to
those threatened by the growing universal indignation that all peoples of the earth envied them
their strength and glory.92
As Germany becomes more detached from reality under this influence, the civilian
population is overtaken by a form of mass hysteria in which observable facts became
secondary to the 'truth' spouted by propaganda. In one scene, a Jewish doctor is harassed
by his patients who accuse him of performing ritualistic murders at his practice, despite
the fact these same patients had only just been treated under his care.93 As the insanity of
this behaviour becomes typical of the entire nation, a marked split emerges in German
society, as the people are divided between the oppressors and the oppressed, and
thousands of 'undesirables' are forced from work, imprisoned, or killed. Crucial to all of
this hardship was propaganda and censorship:
[...] the papers were not allowed to report unpleasant matters. In a country of sixty-five million
people, it had become possible to slaughter three thousand people, to cripple thirty thousand, and
to imprison one hundred thousand without trial and without reason, and yet preserve an outward
aspect of peace and order. The one thing necessary was not to allow the radio or the press to report
these events.94
Through the examination of propaganda and mass manipulation, Feuchtwanger presents
91 Ibid, 341-342.
92 Ibid, 341.
93 Feuchtwanger writes: “He could not understand how sick men, who had been given such diligent scientific attention, could, in
spite of its obvious success, turn upon their doctors. The fact that these people, confronted on the one side by their own experience
and on the other by a stupid persecution in the papers, decided against their experience and in favour of the persecution, staggered
him.” Ibid, 167.
94 Ibid, 256.
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the effect of Nazism as the complete undoing of Germany's civilized society. That brutes
and fanatics existed in the world was not extraordinary, but what made the Third Reich so
horrible was the fact these brutes had taken power in an otherwise advanced and highly
civilized nation and injected their ideology into its laws.95
The theme of propaganda and lies re-appears in another of Feuchtwanger's antiNazi works written in exile, titled Double, Double, Toil and Trouble.96 Here, the author
demonstrates the perspective of a propagandist to illustrate the State's deceptive character.
The novel follows the story of Oscar Lautensack, a stage magician and professional
psychic who rises through the ranks of Nazi society, coached along the way by his
brother, Hans. Hans provides a commentary on the nature of propaganda while explaining
to Oscar the necessity of lies:
It simply isn't possible, my dear Oscar, to teach the masses anything without dressing it up, without
advertisement, without fraud. People resist everything that's out of the ordinary. Do you by any
chance imagine that our Lord Jesus Christ would have accomplished anything if he hadn't sent out
his apostles to advertise his miracles? Not even the Führer would have succeeded without certain
supplementary aids, without big words. [...] Just look up what he says in his book about the
necessity of propaganda, of lies, of fraud. How many false oaths, how much self-humiliation he
had to take on himself!97
Oscar takes this speech to heart, and later passes it on to his naive romantic interest, the
goodhearted Käthe:
A bit of the charlatan is hidden in every magician, in every religious leader, in every creator of a
new world order. If Adolf Hitler were only the Führer, if he weren't also an actor, hadn't a theatrical
flare, he would never have got to the top.98
In addition to demonstrating how the author believed lies were essential to the Nazi
95 Ibid, 287.
96 First published in 1943, Double, Double, Toil and Trouble relates the story of Oscar Lautensack, a stage magician and psychic
who struggles between the noble calling of his gift, and the ignoble satisfactions of greed and ambition offered by his Nazi peers.
Set on the eve of Hitler's assumption of power, it is a novel that focuses on individual culpability amidst an environment ruled by
fear and terror. Oscar's character is also used as a commentary on the character of Adolf Hitler. Oscar sacrifices his artistic
integrity in exchange for the rewards fame and wealth in collaborating with the Nazis. Ultimately, this collaboration proves his
undoing, and he is betrayed.
97 Lion Feuchtwanger, Double, Double, Toil and Trouble, trans. Caroline Oram from the manuscript Die Zauberer, (New York:
Viking Press, 1943), 47.
98 Ibid, 215.
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success, Double, Double, Toil and Trouble attempts to illustrate the Nazi worldview in its
own terms by speculating upon how the Nazis justified their tactics of deception.
Another author who offered a commentary on Nazi propaganda is Erich Maria
Remarque,99 whose 1945 novel, Arch of Triumph,100 relates the experiences of German
exiles living abroad. Set in Paris on the eve of war, the protagonist, Ravic (a surgeon), is
tormented by his memories of the Third Reich, which – even in France – he cannot evade.
The false claims of propaganda made by the Nazis find their way to the outside world,
presenting Hitler's Germany as a glorious revolution. Ravic and his fellow exiles knows
these accounts to be false, but are powerless to do anything against them, as he writes.
Cans with false labels. [...] Counterfeiting! Take a look at that! They build their ammunition
factories because they want peace; their concentration camps because they love the truth; justice is
the cover for every factional madness; political gangsters are saviours; and freedom is the big word
for all greed for power.101
Klaus Mann102 is another author who offers a perspective on propaganda in his
1936 novel, Mephisto,103 which follows the career of Hendrik Höfgen, an ambitious stageactor who switches allegiances according to what is fashionable and who holds power. In
order to advance himself, Höfgen adopts a Nazi persona to fit in with the Third Reich.
Over time, the distinction between Höfgen's Nazi persona and his true identity becomes
99 Erich Maria Remarque (1891-1970) was conscripted for military service in 1917 and then wounded while serving on the Western
front during the First World War. He became a prominent writer afterwords, producing his most famous anti-war novel, All Quiet
on the Western Front . He fled into exile in 1933, and his works were banned and publicly burned by the Nazis during their great
cultural purge. Hans Wagener, Understanding Erich Maria Remarque, (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1991), xixii, 1.
100 First published in 1945, Arch of Triumph follows the story of Ravic, a German exile living in Paris on the eve of the Second World
War. The cynical Ravic is a surgeon who struggles with his past (as a victim of torture in a concentration camp) and seeks revenge
on the Nazi interrogator who tortured him.
101 Remarque writes: “Cans with false labels. [...] Counterfeiting! Take a look at that! They build their ammunition factories because
they want peace; their concentration camps because they love the truth; justice is the cover for every factional madness; political
gangsters are saviours; and freedom is the big word for all greed for power.” Erich Maria Remarque, Arch of Triumph, trans.
Walter Sorell and Denver Lindley, (New York; London: D. Appleton Century Company Inc., 1945), 150.
102 Born in Munich, Germany, Klaus Mann (1906-1949) was the son of famed novelist, Thomas Mann. He fled into exile after 1933
and became an American citizen. He served with the United States Army as a reporter in post-war Germany.
103 Set in Germany at the end of the Republic and extending to the early Nazi years, Mephisto follows the career of theatre-actor
Hendrik Höfgen who advances himself enormously by cooperating with the Third Reich. The story is based on the actual career of
the author's former brother-in-law, Gustaf Gründgens, a former communist turned Nazi sympathizer who enjoyed the patronage of
senior Nazi officials. The book was later the subject of a lawsuit over this legacy.
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increasingly ambiguous. As the Nazi side of his character grows in prominence, Höfgen's
life becomes increasingly ruled by lies, both of his own creation and from those of his
new masters.104 His cooperation with corrupt political authorities and the facade of lies
that govern his behaviour are presented in this way as a reflection of German society at
large:
The foul lie usurps power in this land. It roars in the congress halls, from the microphones, from
the pages of newspapers, from the cinema screen. Its mouth gapes wide, and from its rage comes
the stench of pestilence. Many are those who are driven from this land. And for those who are
forced to stay, their land has become a prison – a stinking dungeon. 105
While Klaus Mann's novel characterizes Nazi propaganda as a blatant display of
lies, political and social theorist Jacques Ellul argues that facts were generally a more
effective means for influencing public opinion, and that twentieth-century propagandists
required a sophisticated understanding of sociology and human psychology in order to
achieve success.106 However, he also states that propaganda “by its very nature is an
enterprise for perverting the significance of events and of insinuating false intentions.”107
In other words, 'truth' was an idea that could be used by skilled propagandists as a tool for
masking lies and manipulating perceptions of reality.
With regards to the importance of propaganda to the Nazi system of rule, the
examples drawn from anti-Nazi literature serve as a fair reflection of reality, for
propaganda was central to the Nazis' political strategy, and arguably, their success.
Though the ideological backbone of Nazism was founded rather tenuously on Antisemitic
fears and romantic racial ideals, it was nonetheless successful in achieving popular
104 Mann writes: “[...] they seemed intent on ensuring that lies and nothing but lies issued from his lips: such was the secret
commandment that governed in this hall, as in the country at large.” Klaus Mann, Mephisto, written in 1936, trans. Robin Smyth,
(New York: Random House, 1977), 18.
105 Ibid, 155.
106 Ellul, Propaganda, 58.
107 Ibid, 3-4.
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support in Germany. While it can be argued that the ideology of Nazism lacked
sophistication, the methods employed by Party officials to control public opinion and
direct behaviour was strategically brilliant. In this vein, Jacques Ellul argues that – for the
Nazis – ideology was secondary in importance to propaganda. The immediate aim of
Nazism was the empowerment of the Party through the mobilization of individuals and
masses towards political actions, which were in turn justified by ideology (that the ends
justified the means). Thus, the official doctrine (the ends) was an accessory to the
propaganda that won power (the means), for Nazism would have been powerless without
the apparatus to spread its worldview and shape attitudes.108
Hitler wrote extensively on the significance of propaganda in relation to the
Party's success, describing it as “by far the most important,” and that in the interest of
furthering the spread of ideology:
[...] everything, beginning with child's primer down to the last newspaper, every theatre and every
movie, every billboard and every bare wall, must be placed at the service of this single great
mission.109
The success of propaganda depended on the Nazis' control of information, as Hitler states:
[...] I have tried, since I came to power, to bring the whole of the German press into line. To do so,
I have not hesitated, when necessary, to take radical measures. It was evident to my eyes that a
State which had at its disposal an inspired press and journalists devoted to its cause possessed
therein the greatest power that one could possibly imagine.110
The Germany described by anti-Nazi authors, in which all forms of public
communication had been appropriated by the government, relates to the coordination of
news agencies under Nazi rule, which began with the purge of some 2000 or more
dissidents from the media. The strictly controlled press were given their stories at daily
conferences hosted by the Propaganda Ministry and instructed on how to report them
108 Ellul, Propaganda, 194-197.
109 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 848, 920-921.
110 Hitler, (May 14, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 361.
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through secret press directives.111 The lack of free speech and political freedom alluded to
by authors was acknowledged by Hitler as one of the goals of his propaganda strategy:
The organization of our press has truly been a success. Our law concerning the press is such that
divergences of opinion between members of the Government are no longer an occasion for public
exhibitions, which are not the newspapers business. We've eliminated that conception of political
freedom according to which everybody has the right to say whatever comes into his head.112
The extent to which propaganda was relied on as a tool for political power is revealed
through the dramatic reversals in opinion that were required to fit the political needs of
the moment. In May of 1942, Hitler boasted of the efficient and manoeuvrable
propaganda machine he had created:
As, in the military sphere, the aircraft has now become a combat weapon, so the press has become
a similar weapon in the sphere of thought. We have frequently found ourselves compelled to
reverse the engine and to change, in the course of a couple of days, the whole trend of imparted
news, sometimes with a complete volte face. Such agility would have been quite impossible, if we
had not had firmly in our grasp that extraordinary instrument of power which we call the press –
and known how to make use of it.113
Despite some variety in how literature depicted the style of Nazi rule, anti-Nazi
authors are consistent in portraying the leaders of the Third Reich as liars who did not
believe in their own ideology. The implication carried by this view suggests that in the
domain of belief, Nazism was not about ideology or political theory, but the strategic
misrepresentation of reality. By extension, propaganda was not only evidence of deceit,
but a manifestation of the hypocrisy that defined the Nazi movement more truthfully than
the ideas put forth as ideology.
Literary criticism also extends to the moral influence exerted by the Third Reich
over individuals, largely through propaganda but also by means of social pressure. In
Feuchtwanger's The Oppermanns, the new Germany is characterized by a complete
111 Herf, The Jewish Enemy, 18, 23-25.
112 Hitler, (February 22-23, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 251.
113 Hitler, (May 14, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 362.
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destruction of civilization114 where “the highest goal of life was death on the field of
battle”115 and in the minds of youths were planted the seeds of fanaticism.116 Similarly,
Klaus Mann's Mephisto presents the rule of lies in Germany as the defining character of
the new society, in which the moral perversion of everyday life is reflected in the new
professional class responsible for running the institutions of the Nazi state:
[There were] very nice murderers who now occupied high positions in the secret police; a
professor recently released from a mental hospital and now minister of culture; jurists who
considered justice a liberal prejudice; doctors who considered the art of healing a Jewish swindle;
philosophers who considered “Race” to be the only objective truth.117
Germany's values under the new regime are presented as having been turned inside out,
and that brutality and insanity had usurped the place of goodness and reason. As in The
Oppermanns, Klaus Mann gives focus to the corruption of German youth, as he writes:
German youth learned the word “pacifist” as a swear word. German youth no longer needed to
read Goethe or Plato; they learned how to shoot and throw bombs; they enjoyed themselves on
night manoeuvres; and when the Führer preached about peace they understood that he was
joking.118
The narrative of Mephisto does not focus on all levels of society, but the author is
careful to describe the coercive environment of the Third Reich as it affects his principle
character, Hendrik Höfgen. Though he is not cruel, sadistic, or Antisemitic, his desire to
succeed professionally within the corrupted Nazi state results in his inevitable moral
downfall. In this way, Klaus Mann's text presents Hitler's Germany as a confusing and
nightmarish world of debauched cruelty where contradictions between right and wrong
constitute the new norm, and that the ambitious pursuit of professional success in such a
114 Feuchtwanger writes: “They had smashed the standards of the civilized world to pieces.” Feuchtwanger, The Oppermanns, 288.
115 Ibid, 341-342.
116 The author writes: “The younger generation was educated in this spirit. They were taught that the war had not been lost, that the
German people was the noblest in the world and therefore menaced from within and without by corrupting forces. [...] Children
were taught that they belonged to the State, not to their parents. What their parents esteemed was derided and condemned. What
appeared execrable to their parents was extolled. They were severely punished if they professed the sentiments of their parents.
They were taught to lie.” Ibid, 342.
117 Mann, Mephisto, 187.
118 Ibid, 247-248.
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context would inevitably result in moral contamination. That which defined 'evil' before
Hitler's reign had been incorporated into the new standards of justice, and the euphemistic
facade of virtuous words is recognized by the public for the lie that it was.
As historical documents, anti-Nazi literature identifies the attack on moral
meaning posed by the Third Reich as the underlying character of the movement. Linguist
and German-Jewish survivor of the Third Reich, Victor Klemperer (1881-1960), supports
this view through his recorded observations. He documented the effects of Nazism on the
domain of language, and was particularly appalled with the Nazis' dehumanizing
euphemisms for murder (ie. “liquidation,” “relocation,” “special treatment”) which not
only masked the truth, but suggested an impersonal, inhuman disregard for the victims.119
The “Language of the Third Reich” was to Klemperer a poignant manifestation of the
infectious mode-of-thought which “poisoned” the minds of Germans.120 As an example,
the meaning of 'heroic' under Nazism entailed blind obedience, mercilessness, and
thoughtless brutality, and was arguably unheroic. Conversely, the meaning of 'fanatic' was
elevated from its typically negative connotations to a more noble status, used to describe
heightened courageousness and devotion, and was promoted accordingly as one of the
essential German virtues.121
As a social critique, the inversion of meaning between good and evil in anti-Nazi
literature also serves as an accurate commentary on the system of values that gave
direction to the National Socialist movement. Though ostensibly standing in defence of
traditional values, Nazism represented a revolutionary break from long-standing ethical
119 Victor Klemperer, The Language of the Third Reich: LTI – Lingua Tertii Imperii, A Philologist's Notebook, trans. Martin Brady,
(London; New York: Continuum, 2000), 149-151.
120 Ibid, 96.
121 Ibid, 5-6, 57-58, 60.
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standards of humility, rationalism, and egalitarianism. Any institution or system of values
that might disrupt the individual's enthusiastic loyalty for the Nazi cause was subject to
suspicion, and would likely come under attack by propagandists for being un-German.
For instance, Hitler viewed Christianity with great animosity because it seemed to
contradict his worldview, was marked by Jewish-corruption, and was responsible for
great suffering in the world (namely the Thirty Years War). He expressed a desire to bring
Christianity to an end, but believed it was unnecessary in light of the Church's slow
decay, and that a confrontation could needlessly provoke the masses' lingering
superstitions.122 Nevertheless, Hitler did denounce religious figures with particular
hostility, stating:
[...] if I ever have the slightest suspicion that they are getting dangerous, I will shoot the lot of
them. This filthy reptile raises its head wherever there is a sign of weakness in the State, and
therefor it must be stamped on whenever it does so. We have no sort of use for a fairy story
invented by Jews.123
With regards to the new system of values brought into place under Nazi rule,
Historian Robert Gellately notes:
In the kind of total war rhetoric the Nazis used, it followed that mercy and compassion toward all
enemies was portrayed as a vice, while intolerance and fanaticism were transformed into
virtues.124
In this vein, Joseph Goebbels was intent on warning Germans to resist their naturally
generous and sympathetic natures, insisting they “must learn to hate.”125 He writes:
The bourgeois era with its false and lying idea of humanitarianism is over. We are in the middle of
a hard century. It will be won not by good nature, but by manliness and strength. The world is
divided by love and hate. To be on firm ground, one must know whom to love and whom to hate. 126
The Nazi perspective held that their cause was both just and of supreme
122 Hitler, Hitler's Table Talk, 8, 40, 110, 472-473.
123 Ibid, (11 August, 1942), 472-473.
124 Robert Gellately, Backing Hitler: Consent and Coercion in Nazi Germany, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001), 4-5.
125Joseph Goebbels, “Seid nicht allzu gerecht!” (Don't be Too Fair!), Das eherne Herz, (Munich: Zentralverlag der NSDAP, 1943),
451-457, accessed online: http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/goeb13.htm, (March 2, 2011), page copyright © 1998 by
Randall Bytwerk.
126 Goebbels, “Seid nicht allzu gerecht!” (Don't be Too Fair!).
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importance, and because of this all questions of morality were to be either disregarded or
amended according to the needs of the German people; unconditional love of the race
required unconditional hatred of the enemy. Anti-Nazi authors interpreted this as a
systematic inversion of meaning between good an evil which elevated the criminal
fanatics of another era to the status of heroes under Hitler, and likewise, turned many
previously 'innocent' persons into hated enemies.
Justice in the Third Reich
While propaganda was heavily criticized for its hypocrisy and corrupting
influence, the most poignant illustration for the effects of Nazi morality on the state
appear in relation to the perversity of justice in the Third Reich.
State-sponsored injustice is a central theme of Erika Mitterer's127 The Prince of
Darkness,128 a work of subversive fiction written in Nazi-occupied Austria using the
historical setting of pre-Reformation Germany as its veil for social criticism. On first
glance, the novel is a critique of the Inquisition and Catholic Church, however themes
relating to mass hysteria, fanaticism, political hypocrisy, arbitrary-authoritarian power,
and the inner darkness of human nature all apply to the Third Reich as subversive
criticisms of the State. Moreover, the novel was read by opponents of the regime as a
critique of contemporary political and social events.129
127 Austrian-born Erika Mitterer (1906-2001) did not flee into exile during the era of Nazi rule. Instead, she wrote coded criticisms of
the state using historical fiction as her guise and was successful in masking the critical intent of her novel, and was read by
opponents of the regime as a political/social critique aimed at contemporary events. Herwig Gottwald [Afterword] “The Prince of
Darkness and the Intellectual Resistance to Nazism,” The Prince of Darkness, (Riverside California: Ariadne Press, 2004), 667668.
128 First published in the city of Hamburg, 1940, The Prince of Darkness (set in medieval Germany), tells the story of two female
protagonists (Hiltrud, a minor noble who changes her name to Maria upon joining a convent, and Theresa, her innocent and
beautiful younger sister) who fall victim to Church and patriarchical authorities during an inquisition, and the rational Dr. Fabri
who tries in vain to help them. The guise of historical fiction was successful in masking the critical intent of the novel, and was
read by opponents of the regime as a political/social critique aimed at contemporary events.
129 Gottwald “The Prince of Darkness and the Intellectual Resistance to Nazism,” 667-668.
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The subjectivity of morality appears as a theme early in the novel through the
character of Hiltrud vom Reid (the daughter of a minor lord), whose secular education
causes her to question many of her basic assumptions about the world, including justice:
What astonished her most was the fact that justice was also subject to changes in time, that all
laws by no means originated so unquestionably with God as did the tablets Moses had received on
Mount Sinai.130
The crone-like character of Ursula (a wise woman and healer) provides a second
influence on her developing worldview as she teaches Hiltrud of hidden wisdom and acts
as the voice of an outsider in an otherwise homogenous Christian society. Through these
influences, and in addition to her observations, Hiltrud is taught about the impermanence
of supposedly inherent truths, of the importance of perspective in colouring our
perceptions of reality, and of the possibility for widely-held opinions to be false.131 As a
political commentary, this alludes to the Nazis' influence on the meaning of good and evil,
and the resulting corruption of justice.
The corruptibility of justice in Mitterer's novel is given more direct examination
through the character of Dr. Jacobus Schuller, a high inquisitor and judge who terrorizes
the citizens of a German city during a witch trial. The inquisitor is presented as a zealous
true-believer who cares little for material gain.132 He is completely confident in the moral
righteousness of his cause, and ignores any evidence that seems to contradict his
assumptions. He is an all-powerful figure who embodies the authority of the ruling beliefsystem and is completely unbound by any sanctions on behaviour, as the exasperated and
defeated city bishop declares, “The Inquisition has the right to make every right its
130 Erika Mitterer, The Prince of Darkness, written in 1940, trans. Catherine Hutter, (Riverside California: Ariadne Press, 2004), 64.
131 Ibid, 68.
132 Ibid, 471: “Jacobus Schuller considered it his business in life the cheat Satan.”
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own!”133
However the power of the judge is reliant upon another destructive force, which is
the fear of evil itself, as personified by the Devil. In The Prince of Darkness, Germany is
saturated by fear of evil, which is described as an invisible but omnipresent force that
seeks to corrupt mankind in all its forms. In hunting and persecuting supposed Devil
worshippers (who were in actuality innocent), no manner of ruthlessness or brutality was
too extreme. In this way, fear of Satan also serves as a suitable analogy for the
Antisemitic fears of the Third Reich. Either view stems from a ruling ideology and leads
to the unjust persecution of innocents on the basis of a subjective moral perspective. An
implication that can be drawn from this comparison suggests Nazism represented a return
to a darker period of the past, wherein fanaticism, hysterical fears, and blind devotion
trumped reason and observation with disastrous consequences.
A similar criticism of Nazi justice is found in Hans Fallada's134 Every Man Dies
Alone,135 which tells the story of a middle-aged Berlin couple who face persecution after
being caught distributing subversive messages on postcards. Written immediately
following the Second World War and based on true events, Fallada depicts the character
of the Nazi judge (Judge Fromme) with particular malice as a needlessly cruel and
vindictive authority. The Judge derives sadistic pleasure from the delivery of death
133 Ibid, 366.
134 Hans Fallada (1893-1947, born Rudolf Wilhelm Friedrich Ditzen) was an accomplished author who suffered throughout his life
from psychological distress and substance abuse, and spent time on separate occasions in prisons and sanatoriums. He remained in
Germany throughout the era of Nazi rule and remained neutral in his stance towards the regime, collaborating with them on some
literary projects. In his personal life he suffered mentally under the Nazis, and wrote in secret his heavily autobiographical The
Drinker while incarcerated for the attempted murder of his wife, and completed Every Man Dies Alone immediately following
Germany's defeat at the end of the Second World War. Geoff Wilks, (Afterword), Every Man Dies Alone, (New York: Melville
House Publishing, 2009), 511-517; Henry Ashby Turner, Jr., “Fallada for Historians,” German Studies Review , vol. 26, no. 3
(Oct., 2003), 477-479.
135 First published in 1947 with the German title Jeder stirbt für sich allein, the novel was written in a twenty-four day span following
the Second World War, as the author struggled with depression and relapses of narcotics abuse. The narrative follows the story of
Otto and Anna Quangel who resist through the distribution of anonymous postcards with anti-Nazi statements written on them in
the streets of Berlin, and the investigations of the Gestapo who close on their prey. The events and characters are based on the true
story of Otto and Elise Hampel who were found guilty of treason and executed by beheading in March, 1943.
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sentences, works to enact the greatest torment and humiliation possible upon victims, and
is described as a living embodiment of the perversion of truth and justice.136 Other
characters who collaborate with the Nazis are treated with relative understanding: the
informant is motivated by poverty and moral weakness; the SS guards are numbed to
suffering but are also human; even the relentless Gestapo agent is subject to extreme
moral doubts. Fallada's judge is like Mittere's Inquisitor in that he is a true believer who
gleefully condemns the innocent and acts without regret because he stands in defence of
the ruling moral code. In this way, the sadism of both figures is used to personify the most
vile and infuriating hypocrisy of Nazi justice, which reserves no place for mercy or
compassion.
Author and playwright Bertold Brecht137 provides an alternative perspective on the
corruption of justice through his 1938 play, Fear and Misery of the Third Reich.138 Here,
the character of a judge is presented as a tormented and compromised individual whose
professional duty is affected by the political demands of the state. The judge presides over
a case involving a Nazi street thug, a Jewish shopkeeper, and an unemployed worker, and
while the verdict should be clear (as the Nazi thug is clearly guilty), the compromised
political system turns it into a complex and dangerous affair, as the judge professes:
I'll do anything , my God, can't you see my position? [...] I'll give my judgement this way or that
way, whatever way they want me to, but I've got to know first what they want me to do. If one
doesn't know that, there's no justice left. [...] I'm prepared to go over everything in the most careful
and conscientious possible way, but I have to be told what kind of a decision will satisfy higher
considerations. [...] It's easy for my wife to say I should just find out what actually happened. I'd
136 Hans Fallada, Every Man Dies Alone, New York: Melville House Publishing, 2009, 449-455.
137 Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956) was an accomplished German playwright of international renown. Due to his openly professed
Marxist sympathies, he fled into exile after 1933 and relocated frequently within Europe, eventually reaching the United States,
where he remained throughout the war. He maintained his vocal opposition of the Third Reich, and completed numerous critical
works, including Fear and Misery of the Third Reich, Señora Carrar's Rifles, The Visions of Simone Machard, Schweyk in the
Second World War, and Mother Courage (amongst others).
138 Fear and Misery of the Third Reich (written 1935-1938, first produced in 1938) is an openly-critical anti-Nazi play consisting of a
collection of vignettes portraying the various negative traits of life under the Third Reich.
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wake up in a hospital if nothing worse.139
Brecht directs additional criticism against Hitler's police, who, by enacting 'police
justice', also fulfil the role of judge. The disregard for law or justice by Nazi police is
evident in his satirical play, Schweyk in the Second World War,140 as illustrated through a
telephone conversation between a police chief (Bullinger) and an anonymous Nazi
interrogator:
TELPHONE VOICE: Motorized squad. Banker Krusha denies making any remarks about the
attempted assassination. Says he couldn't have read the news because he was arrested before it
happened.
BULLINGER: Is he the Commercial Bank? In that case, give him ten on the ass.[...]
TELEPHONE VOICE: Motorized squad. Krusha has confessed to the remarks, but only that the
attempted assassination was all one to him. Not that he was happy about it, or that the Führer's a
clown, but only that he's human like everybody else.
BULLINGER: Five more until he's happy and the Führer's a stinking clown. [...]
TELEPHONE VOICE: Motorized squad 4. Mrs. Moudra, the grocer, denies overstepping the
ordinance that shops must not be opened before nine A.M. She claims she opened at ten.
BULLINGER: Lock her up for a couple of months, the lazy bitch, for under-stepping the
ordinance.141
This satirical portrayal of corruption and injustice showcases the arbitrary power of the
police to operate with obvious disregard for truth, and – like the figure of the judge signifies the moral corruption of the state.
The corruption of justice portrayed in literature is an accurate commentary on
Germany's compromised legal system. Under Nazi rule, the court system became
radicalized as they were forced to adapt to new laws and meet the demand for harsher
judgements. The death sentence became increasingly common for minor crimes,
particularly during the war years when the difference between 'normal' and 'political'
crimes grew ever-more vague. Additionally, Hitler was careful to monitor justice
139 Bertolt Brecht, “Fear and Misery of the Third Reich,” Collected Plays, vol. 4, part 3, eds. John Willett and Ralph Manheim, trans.
John Wilett, (London: Methuen, 1983), 40.
140 Schweyk in the Second World War takes place in occupied-Prague, following the story of a working-class, irreverent and playful
individual who passively opposes Nazi officials by making a mockery of their authority and performing false acts of collaboration.
Though this satirical narrative is at times lighthearted and playful, it is also bears deeply critical meanings.
141 Bertolt Brecht, “Schweyk in the Second World War,” Collected Plays, vol. 7, eds. Ralph Manheim and John Willett, (New York:
Vintage books (A division of Random House), 1975), 77-82.
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proceedings and would personally intervene in cases he felt had been dealt with too
leniently, as he stated in June, 1942:
Eventually I had to tell Gürtner of my implacable resolve to have traitors, who had been too
leniently treated by the normal courts, handed over to an SS Commando and shot. For treason is an
offence revealing a hostile mind [ein Gesinnungsdelikt], and every traitor must be executed
regardless of the amount of damage he has done.”142
A “special” court system run by the SS was established to function as competition for the
regular courts, and would often execute prisoners if civil courts would not.143 The
challenge to judicial authority posed by this competing court system, which succeeded on
the basis of its absolute loyalty to Hitler and the Nazi government, led to an escalation of
ruthlessness in the civil courts that were forced to compete in order not to be
overshadowed. Hitler encouraged this escalation by rewarding mercilessness and
punishing 'weak' judgements.
The judges of today have no clear notion of their duties. [...] I shall not hesitate to dismiss
ruthlessly any judge who consistently gives judgement harmful to the good of the people and
contrary to the national outlook [...] Discipline at the front demands rules of iron, and it would be
an injustice to the front line to allow mercy to hold sway at home.144
These factors combined into a notoriously bloodthirsty court system that sentenced to
death an estimated 16,500 people inside Germany between 1933 and 1945, three-fourths
of which were carried out.145
In its essence, the institution of legal justice serves as a reflection of the moral will
of a state, and was given emphasis by anti-Nazi authors to illustrate the furthest reaches of
the Nazis' corrupting influence. For this purpose, the figure of the judge serves a dual role
as both a symbolic representative of Germany's official moral code, and a direct
142 Hitler, (June 7, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 391.
143 Gellately, Backing Hitler, 48, 77-78.
144 Hitler, (May 22, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 380.
145 This number is an estimate and would likely be much higher, for it does not take into account the thinly veiled police executions
that would have occurred outside the legal process, and were sometimes the recourse for execution in cases of insufficient
evidence. It also does not include the extrajudicial deaths that occurred in the concentration camps. Gellately, Backing Hitler, 8587.
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illustration of the harsh reality of Nazi-justice. In making such criticisms against
Germany's new brand of laws, the writings of Fallada, Mitterer, Brecht, and others, likely
reflect the fear and hatred felt by ordinary Germans towards the officials that enforced
'justice' within the Third Reich. It is also noteworthy that criticism was not typically
focused on Antisemitism, as Post-Holocaust histories tend to be. Rather, it was the
broadly conceived conquest of cruelty, dishonesty, and insanity over compassion, truth,
and reason that characterizes of the Nazi state.
Conclusion
The corruption of meaning through propaganda and the spread of ideology under
Nazi rule is presented in anti-Nazi literature as extending to all fields of human
experience, culminating in a complete destruction of 'civilization' that turned mere
existence within the Third Reich into a trial of body and mind. Crucial to these works is
the presentation of Nazism as an attack on the sphere of thought in which traditional
notions of truth, decency, and justice, are imperilled by the spreading Nazi worldview.
Conversely, belief in the supposed 'international Jewish conspiracy', as presented
through Nazi propaganda, identifies the Jews as a similar form of omnipresent evil that
posed a threat to society's most basic values. The supposed Jewish threat also amounted
to an attack on the domain of thought, due in part to the conspiracy's requirement of
secrecy to ensure that the 'true' nature of Jewish evil be kept from public awareness. It
was thus the duty of all racially aware Germans to embrace Antisemitism and take part in
eliminating the Jewish menace.
For either worldview, belief in evil was used to explain how modern society had
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come to be, and where the root of suffering lay. In both cases, evil is presented as the
result of a vast organizational conspiracy that operated through deception, that corrupted
everything it infested, and operated with the ultimate goal of enslaving or destroying the
free people of Germany. For the Nazis, this form of evil meant the international Jewish
conspiracy and the threat posed through their corruption of the Germanic race, and for
anti-Nazi authors it was the perversion of truth, 'goodness', and justice brought through
the spread of Nazism.
Though the ideas put forth in anti-Nazi literature and Nazi propaganda draw from
distinct assumptions about reality, the similarities in form between either perception of
evil suggests they were responding to common anxieties, namely the mistrust of
information, which was central to either worldview. Through the comparison of Nazi
propaganda with anti-Nazi literature, a contest of ideas based on similar fears is revealed,
the stakes of which would determine Germany's future. While many issues were involved
in this contest (including notions of race, history, and morality), at its root, the division in
belief hinged on distinct perceptions of evil. It would have been possible for the Nazis to
embrace a racialist worldview without Antisemitism, but belief in true evil gave an
urgency to their movement that justified their every excess. However, since race was not a
significant feature of anti-Nazi literature, it cannot be considered the central issue of
disagreement. Rather, authors demonstrate an entirely different worldview that presents
evil in its purest forms through the hypocrisy of Nazi-justice, the perversity of Nazimorals, and the rule of lies brought through the Nazis' disregard for truth. Thus, belief in
evil not only differentiated one worldview from the other through a fundamental
difference in moral perspective, but gave meaning and purpose to their respective causes.
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CHAPTER 2
Power and Brutality
Inevitably, criticisms of Nazism will touch on the subjects of power and brutality.
This is not only because of the extreme violence carried out by Nazis during their rule,
but applies to the fact power and brutality were highly valued on an ideological level.
Propagandists presented brutality in the context of Germany's struggle for survival as a
necessary measure for preserving the race and the nation's enemies. Accordingly,
overwhelming physical force became idolized through Nazi art and rhetoric as a pure and
beautiful reflection of their racialist worldview.
Anti-Nazi authors agree with this perception to the extent that Hitler's supporters
were shown to be forceful, but their approach is from a perspective on the receiving side
of Nazi brutality. Thus, a common trait in defining the character of Hitler's rule bears
focus on the imbalance of power it created between the people and the state.
In this way, both the Nazi and anti-Nazi worldviews present power and evil as
sharing a close relationship, with the crucial difference resting on the direction of
influence between either subject. While the Hitler believed evil was a natural part of life
that required brutal-force as a counter-measure, anti-Nazi authors present the brutality of
Nazi power as the force which made evil a part of everyday life in the Third Reich.
Natural law and the struggle for survival
Though the central concern of Nazism was to expose and destroy the 'international
Jewish conspiracy,' the core principle of their ideology that preceded any other belief
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maintained that nature was the determining factor behind all worldly affairs. Hitler
believed in 'natural law' as the governing principle of the universe against which notions
of civilization and religion were meaningless.146 Because nature determined the innate
character of human beings and supplied the eternal laws that governed existence, he
believed that man should seek to obey nature rather than set out to conquer it, as he states:
“I have the feeling that it's useful to know the laws of nature – for that enables us to obey
them. To act otherwise would be to rise in revolt against heaven.”147 Hitler proposed that
the inner workings of nature were beyond human comprehension and should be simply
accepted as a matter of fact.148 As for traditional religion, he proclaimed that all spiritual
feeling was the result of an instinctual awareness of the higher powers of nature, which
had been misleadingly exploited by priests.149
One of the first rules of natural law maintained that the essence of life was a great
struggle for survival. This drew inspiration from Darwin's theory of evolution, but was
also derived from Hitler's personal experiences of violence in the trenches of the First
World War, as he writes:
It was with feelings of pure idealism that I set out for the front in 1914. Then I saw men falling
around me in thousands. Thus I learnt that life is a cruel struggle, and has no other object but the
preservation of the species. The individual can disappear, provided there are other men to replace
him.150
Hitler was directly affected by this cataclysm, as was much of Europe, creating a
potentially deadly common-ground between the leader and his subjects. On this notion,
historian George Mosse argues that the war caused a certain “brutalization of conscience”
that rendered death and killing into a more acceptable part of reality, leading to a
146 Hitler, (July 11-12, 1941), Hitler's Table Talk, 7.
147 Ibid, (December 1-2, 1941), 104.
148 Hitler states: “A thing is so, and our understanding cannot conceive of other schemes.” Ibid, (July 11-12, 1941), 7.
149 Ibid, (September 23, 1941), 32.
150 Ibid, (September 25-26, 1941), 36.
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glorification of death, that one might see reflected in the Nazis' obsession with violent
struggle, self-sacrifice, and martyrdom.151
To Hitler, existence had no greater meaning than the struggle for survival, and the
life of any person was insignificant next to the preservation of the species; death was not
a tragedy but an essential part of natural law.152 Hitler saw the struggle for species
survival in everyday events and used it to explain the meaning of suffering and war.153 Of
the modern age, he states:
War has returned to its primitive form. The war of the people against people is giving place to
another war – a war for the possession of great spaces. Originally war was nothing but a struggle
for pasture grounds. Today war is nothing but a struggle for the riches of nature. By virtue of an
inherent law, these riches belong to him who conquers them. [...] That's in accordance with the
laws of nature. By means of the struggle, by allowing the survival of the fittest.154
History, culture, and politics could all be explained through to the logic of natural
struggle, and accordingly, Hitler seems to have taken inspiration from the examples set by
animals as honest embodiments of natural law, using evidence of brutality in the animal
world to justify the ruthlessness of his own policies.155
Because natural law and the struggle for species survival were central to Nazi
thought, physical strength and brutal force became idolized as two of the movements'
highest ideals. To illustrate this point, Nazi-inspired 'high art' adopted classical motifs as a
form of cultural propaganda to glorify the human body in its racially ideal form.
151 Mosse, Toward the Final Solution, 174, 204-205.
152 Hitler states: “The earth continues to go round, whether it's the man who kills the tiger or the tiger who eats the man. The stronger
asserts his will, it's the law of nature. The world doesn't change; its laws are eternal.” Hitler, (September 23, 1941), Hitler's Table
Talk, 31.
153 Hitler, Hitler’s Second Book, 9.
154 Hitler, (October 10, 1941), Hitler's Table Talk, 41.
155 Hitler states: “During the showing of a film of Tibet, Reichsleiter Dietrich was struck with the way in which the wild horses of the
high Tibetan plains followed the stallion who was guiding them. And what is true of wild horses applies equally to every
community of creatures desirous of safeguarding its survival. [...] This undoubtedly explains why monkeys put to death any
member of their community who show a desire to live apart. And what the apes do, men do, too, in their own manner.” Ibid, (May
14, 1942), 364.
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Representing the master race
After the Nazification of German culture, many artists found work in service to
the state producing art that represented Nazi ideals. This 'Nazi art' served as a form of
propaganda which could advertised the cultural sophistication of the Third Reich.
Additionally, since art and life were perceived as reflections of each other, 'racially pure'
depictions of the human form could serve as demonstrations of Germany's purification.156
The monumental male nude is perhaps the most iconic figure of Nazi art. While
the male figure is not an uncommon subject for artistic representation, its treatment by
Nazi artists was unusual for its scale and prominence in public display. Massive scale
contributed to the spectacle of Nazi art, and appropriately conveys the epic nature of the
Nazis' supposed race struggle.
Joseph Thorak's157 Monument to Work (ca. 1937, unfinished), a gigantic sculptural
composition which depicts a group of male nudes straining together under the effort of
moving a large boulder up a slope, is an example of Nazi cultural propaganda that
celebrates power. The work was commissioned to decorate a newly constructed highway,
and while it was never completed, its intention was to glorify the working man for his
fortitude, strength, and cooperative spirit. This relates to the Nazis' appeal to the German
working classes, and their general opposition to modernism, which it was felt had robbed
modern man of his masculinity through oppressive and dehumanizing industrial labour. In
this vein, historian J. A. Mangan argues that the idealized male form in Nazi art served as
156 Mangan, “Icon of Monumental Brutality,” 130, 136.
157 Josef Thorak (1889-1952) was born in Vienna, became a professional sculptor, and had earned some international recognition by
1933. His talent was recognized by the Nazis, and his career prospered in their service. He was recognized by Hitler and granted a
professorship, earned several private commissions from the Führer, and for the creation of his massive sculptural works had a
massive four-story studio constructed for him by Nazi architect Albert Speer. His ideological convictions are questionable, as he
joined the National Socialist Party relatively late in 1941, and a colleague described him as “politically clueless and naive,” but
many of his works were nonetheless commissioned by the Nazis to represent the ideals of their movement. Jonathan Petropoulos,
The Faustian Bargain: The Art World in Nazi Germany, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000), 265-267.
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an emblem of powerful male authority that could serve as an antidote to the modern
industrial age.158
The cooperative effort depicted in this work also suggests the virtue of duty and
the comradeship of arms, each of which were essential principles for the Nazi cause. One
intention of Nazi propaganda was to present the Third Reich as a revolution in body and
spirit that could only be brought about as the cumulative result of a great collective effort;
it is likely that Monument to Work alludes to this perception, with the boulder
symbolizing the German Nation's struggle to achieve greatness. The theme of communal
effort is evident in another of Thorak's monumental sculptural works, titled Comradeship
(1937), which portrays two enormous male figures standing with a hand in each others'
grasp, their gaze staring fixedly ahead, as if looking to the future. The enormous size and
pronounced musculature of these figures suggests an obsession with masculine physical
strength that verges on a form of worship, and was intended to reflect the powerful
character of the Third Reich.
While it may be argued that figures such as these reflect a mindless adoration of
masculine barbarity, the aim behind such works was to encourage the recruitment of the
nation's young men to the Nationalist cause by celebrating brute strength and the male
duty of defending the homeland. The Nazis were not unique in adopting this mode of
cultural expression; the Soviet's, for example, were famous for their use of monumental
sculptural figures to convey key concepts of Communist belief, as demonstrated by the
Soviet Pavilion for the 1937 Paris World's Fair (fig.15).159
158 J. A. Mangan, “Blond, Strong and Pure: 'Proto-Fascism', Male Bodies and Political Tradition,” and “Icon of Monumental
Brutality: Art and the Aryan Man” Shaping the Superman: Fascist Body as Political Icon, (London; Portland: Frank Cass, 1999),
115-117, 139-140.
159 Ades, “Paris 1937: Art and the Power of Nations,” 58-60.
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Depictions of women in Nazi art also bear ideological features relating to race and
power, though the focus is not on physical strength so much as it is on feminine purity
and motherhood. An example of this is found in Joseph Thorak's Devotion (1940), a
sculptural representation of a female form standing in a symmetrical pose with
outstretched arms, gazing upwards. While the title and pose suggest religious
connotations, it is more likely that this work was intended as a racially-inspired vision of
the ideal woman. Pure, balanced, and submissive, she appears as a monumental object of
desire, that – like the masculine icon of strength – was both noble and eternal.160
This interpretation reflects the perception of women maintained by Nazi
propagandists, who argued that in the context of race struggle, it was the mission of
women to appear beautiful and bear children. On this subject, Joseph Goebbels made his
views clear:
The first, best, and most suitable place for the women is in the family, and her most glorious duty
is to give children to her people and nation, children who can continue the line of generations and
who guarantee the immortality of the nation. [...] If the family is the nation’s source of strength, the
woman is its core and centre. The best place for the woman to serve her people is in her marriage,
in the family, in motherhood. This is her highest mission.161
On the importance of feminine beauty, Goebbels pronounced that maintaining an
attractive appearance for the sake of procreation was an essential part of female duty,
stating: “The mission of woman is to be beautiful and to bring children into the world.
[...] The female bird pretties herself for her mate and hatches the eggs for him.”162 This
focus on the biological function of women as breeders was not only a rebellion against
the trend for 'modern' women to live beyond the restraints traditionally assigned to their
160 Eric Michaud, The Cult of Art in Nazi Germany, trans. Janet Lloyd, (Stanford Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2004), 158.
161Joseph Goebbels, “Deutsches Frauentum” (German Women), Signale der neuen Zeit, 25 ausgewählte Reden von Dr. Joseph
Goebbels (Munich: Zentralverlag der NSDAP., 1934), 118-126, accessed online:
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/goeb55.htm (March 2, 2011), page copyright © 1999 by Randall Bytwerk.
162 (Quoted in) Mosse, Nazi Culture, 41.
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gender, it was a vital component of the race struggle, and was equated with to the
masculine duties of war.163 Of this view, Hitler declared, "Everytime she [woman] brings
a child into the world, she emerges victorious in the battle for being or non-being of the
people."164 Similarly, Reich physician Dr. Wagner declared:
The prolific German mother is to be accorded the same place of honour in the German volk
community as the combat soldier, since she risks her body and her life for the people and the
Fatherland as much as the combat soldier does in the roar and thunder of battle. 165
Nazi theorists were obsessed with the aesthetics of physical power because it was
synonymous with their broadly conceived notions of racial purification. This extended to
all fields, including art, architecture and the planning of public spaces.166 An example of
Nazi architecture that was built to represent Germanic power can be found in Albert
Speer's167 German pavilion at the 1937 Paris World's Fair (fig.15), a cubic mass that was
intended to counter the Soviet pavilion by showing the rigid might of the Third Reich.168
Hitler was even critical of modern dress (which he describes as “dandified
fashionableness”) for concealing too much of the body's physique and thus weakening the
people by undermining the the benefits of attaining a “beautiful, well-shaped body.”169 As
a remedy, Hitler proposed young men should adopt the practice of wearing tightly fitted
163 It is interesting to note in this context that female-Nazi militants in the late 1920s and early 1930s had argued for the equality of
women within the Party, demanding the opportunity to uphold Nazi values beyond the bedroom. Leila J. Rupp, “Mother of the
'Volk': The Image of Women in Nazi Ideology,” Signs, vol. 3, no. 2 (University of Chicago Press, Winter, 1977), 364.
164 (Quoted in) Michaud, The Cult of Art in Nazi Germany, 158.
165 Mosse, Nazi Culture, 45.
166 Of this, Hitler states: “What is ugly in Berlin, we shall suppress. Nothing will be too good for the beautification of Berlin. When
one enters the Reich Chancellery, one should have the feeling that one is visiting the master of the world. One will arrive there
along wide avenues containing the Triumphal Arch, the Pantheon of the Army, the Square of the People – things to take your
breath away! It's only thus that we shall succeed in eclipsing our only rival in the world, Rome. Let it be built on such a a scale
that St. Peter's and its square will seem like toys in comparison!” Hitler, (21-22 October, 1941), Hitler's Table Talk, 64.
167 Alber Speer served as Hitler's chief architect before taking on additional ministerial duties. He was a prolific figure in the
National Socialist cultural world, designing many of the iconic structures associated with Hitler's reign.
168 The architect, Albert Speer, states: “The Soviet Russian and the German Pavilions were to be placed directly opposite one another
on the fairground; the French directors of the fair had deliberately arranged this confrontation. [...] I therefore designed a cubic
mass, also elevated on stout pillars, which seemed to be checking this onslaught, while from the cornice of my tower an eagle with
a swastika in its claws looked down on the Russian sculptures.” Dawn Ades, “Paris 1937: Art and the Power of Nations,” Art and
Power: Europe Under the Dictators 1930-45, eds. Dawn Ades et. all, (Stuttgart, Germany: Oktagon in association with Hayward
Gallery, 1995), 160.
169 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 619.
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leather shorts.
The aspect of beauty in Nazi art also reflects the apparent contradiction between
the ordinary and the extreme that underlines Nazism, and relates to the problematic nature
of their idealism. Nazi art was based on recognizable virtues of moral and physical purity,
yet came to signify racism, death, and extreme evil. It may be for this reason that art
historians seem to view Nazi art with considerable discomfort, as for example Jonathan
Petropoulos who describes it as technically good but “strange and sterile,” and “precise
yet unreal,” or historian Saul Friedländer who defines the the distinguishing characteristic
of Nazi art to be the feeling of uneasiness it elicits.170 While these views are partly the
result of hindsight, they suggest a fundamental characteristic of the Nazi worldview
which continues to perplex us.
The reason for this may reside in the Nazis' strategic use of popular and
recognizable themes (such as classical ideals in beauty) to convey their views to the
masses. In purely visual terms, their creations can be called beautiful, though the meaning
they carry as symbols of murderous racism are bound to anti-Nazi perceptions of evil.
This creates a confusion of meaning between good and evil, resulting in an unsettling
form of art which could be termed 'uncanny'.171 In this regard, cultural Theorist Susan
Sontag argues the beauty of Nazi art should never be separated from the ugliness of the
ideology that inspired its creation.172
By examining Nazi art and ideological rhetoric, it becomes evident that beauty,
170 Petropoulos, The Faustian Bargain, 225, 257-258; Saul Friedländer, Reflections of Nazism: An Essay on Kitsch and Death.,
(Indiana: Indiana University Publishing, 1993), 19-20.
171 The uncanny is a concept developed by Sigmund Freud to signify "the strange within the familiar", or the hemlich (familiar and
comfortable) reversed and made unheimlich (uncanny strangeness) that results in unconscious fear and anxiety that is not always
explainable. Julia Kristeva, Strangers to Ourselves, (New York: Columbia University, 1991), 182-183.
172 Susan Sontag, “Fascinating Fascism,” Under the Sign of Saturn, (New York: Doubleday, 1991), 6-10.
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power, and notions of race were combined into one entity. Beauty was consistent with the
ideals of nature, which in relation to the race struggle meant physical power or even
brutality.
Table 1: The Nazi worldview stemmed from their belief in natural law as a
brutal struggle for survival, which translated into a need for power in order to
preserve the race. Their depictions of physical beauty reflect this as a
demonstration of their highest concerns.
Even though the human body is a common subject for artistic representation,
Nazism turned it into an ideologically charged form of expression tied to the specific
context of the Third Reich. The desire to purify the race was an all-consuming obsession,
and the ideals they represented in art were reflected in their eugenic attempts at social
engineering.173 The works of Josef Thorak highlight the importance of physical strength
and power in Nazi thought, and he was by no means the only artist to do so. Arno Breker
and George Kolbe were fellow sculptors who created works representing similar themes,
as did the painters Adolf Ziegler and Albert Janesh, to name but a few.
173 Peter Reichel, “Festival and Cult: Masculine and Militaristic Mechanisms of National Socialism,” Shaping the Superman: Fascist
Body as Political Icon, ed. J.A. Mangan, (London; Portland: Frank Cass, 1999), 165.
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Power as an attribute to evil
Regarding the theme of power and evil, the focus of anti-Nazi authors falls on the
imbalance of power between the people and the state caused by the Third Reich. This
perception was not the result of a systematic worldview derived from a particular
ideology, but rather, reflects the role of their literature as social commentary derived from
the observations of individual authors. As such, a consistent complaint raised by authors
relates to the difficulty faced by opponents of the Nazi regime in carrying out acts of
meaningful resistance, due to their own lack of power.
The Nazi leadership
In criticizing the power of the Third Reich, many authors focus on the Nazi
leadership, and Hitler in particular, as heavily flawed figures of immense authority who
were treated by the press and the public with a kind of spiritual reverence. This relates to
the historical reality of the actual power enjoyed by Hitler and his chiefs of staff, as well
as the aura of authority they created for themselves through propaganda and pageantry.
Ernst Jünger174 is one author who made a unique contribution to anti-Nazi
literature through his 1939 novel, On Marble Cliffs,175 which is set in a vaguely historical
fantasy land and documents the rise of a tyrannical menace, called “the Chief Ranger.”
174Ernst Jünger (1895-1998) began a military career early in life after running away from school to join the Foreign Legion African
Divisions. In 1914 he volunteered for military service, was commissioned as an officer, and became a highly decorated veteran
after being wounded several times in the trenches. He recorded his experiences in his 1920 novel, Stahlgewittern ('The Storm of
Steel'), which became his most famous and widely read work. Though Jünger retained some similar 'blood and soil' nationalist
ideals as the Nazis and was celebrated by them as a hero, he became disillusioned with the tyranny of Hitler's regime. This
criticism of tyranny is evident in his 1939 novel, On Marble Cliffs, which also reveals elements of the nihilism that Jünger
struggled with throughout life. John K. Cooley, “The Adventures of Ernst Jünger,” Books Abroad, vol. 32, no. 4 (Autumn, 1958),
365-368.
175 On Marble Cliffs is an example of subversive literature which criticizes Hitler and the Third Reich using the veil of a semihistorical setting. The narrative is set in a pristine natural landscape that incorporates elements of history and fantasy, called 'The
Great Marina', which is threatened by the rise of a tyrant called the 'Chief Ranger'. The novel was published in 1939 in Germany
and though it was recognized for its subversive commentary, the author was not punished.
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The Chief Ranger is the leader of a people called “the Mauretanians,” and can be read as
a relatively thinly veiled commentary on Hitler and the Nazis. The narrative takes place in
an idyllic pastoral land called “The Great Marina,” which is conquered by the Chief
Ranger and descends into a state of anarchy. The narrator is a naturalist and respected war
veteran who spends time in the Chief Ranger's camp, becoming familiar with his
character, as well as that of his supporters:
Thus I had frequent opportunities to see him close at hand, and felt the breath of primitive power
that surrounded him like a breeze from his forests. At this period I was scarcely disturbed by the
inflexibility of his nature, for all Mauretanians acquire with time something of the nature of an
automaton. This characteristic is particularly marked in their glance, and so the eyes of the Chief
Ranger, too – especially when he laughed – gleamed with terrifying mirth. Like those of hardened
drinkers, they were touched with a red flame, but expressed both cunning and unshakeable power
yes, at times even majesty. Then we took pleasure in his company and lived in arrogance at the
table of the great ones of the world.176
The tyrant is described in these terms as something akin to a primitive force of nature,
and his followers are presented similarly as fearless beings of chaos and destruction.177
They are innately savage due to their inherited traits, and demand that their leaders rule
with absolute authority. Jünger writes:
They demanded that power should be exercised dispassionately as by a god, and correspondingly
its schools produced a race of spirits who were bright, untrammelled, but always terrible. Similarly,
whether their duties lay in insurrection or in order, wherever they won the day they won it as
Mauretanians, and the proud 'Semper victrix' of this Order applied not only to its members, but to
its head and fount of doctrine. Immovable amongst the wild currents of the times he stood, and in
his residence and palaces one was on firm ground.178
Though the savagery of 'the Mauretanians' is presented as a characteristic of their
innate nature, they become unnecessarily destructive towards the simple agrarian lifestyle
idolized by the narrator, and as their power swells, they becomes a threat to the world's
natural balance. The disillusionment expressed by the narrator in light of this destructive
176 Ernst Jünger, On Marble Cliffs (Auf dem Marmorkippen), first published in 1939, trans. Stuart Hood, (Middlesex, England:
Penguine Books Inc., 1970), 33.
177 Ibid, 34-35.
178 Ibid, 34.
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behaviour likely reflects the author's own relationship with the Nazi Party, for, as a
veteran of the First World War with nationalist leanings, Jünger shared some views with
the Nazis,179 but he did not support Hitler's style of government and distanced himself
from the Party. As a solution to the problem of tyrannical power, Jünger suggests in his
novel that the imbalance to nature brought by the excessive savagery of the Mauretanians
would be their undoing, for the universe, which was far more powerful than humanity,
would seek to right itself, bringing ruin to the tyrant and his supporters.
Unlike the veiled criticisms in Jünger's novel, the characterization of 'power' in
Klaus Mann's Mephisto portrays Hitler and the Nazi high-command directly. Hitler is
presented as a partially insane man with with a godlike aura of authority, whose sense of
reality had become almost entirely unhinged. Mann writes:
The Führer's eyes are abstracted and dull like those of a blind man. Is he looking inward, straining
his ears to hear something inside himself? Perhaps. Perhaps he is listening to the same message
that his propaganda ministers and all the newspapers he controls never tire of repeating: that he is
the one sent from God who need only to follow his own star and Germany and then the whole
world will prosper under his leadership.180
In a surreal vision of corrupt power, Klaus Mann describes the atmosphere of dread and
power surrounding Hermann Göring and Joseph Goebbels, who join Hitler in a
triumvirate of evil:
[...] the massive air force officer, newly promoted to general, belonged to the very highest summit
of the authoritarian and all-powerful state. Above him was only the Führer – a man hardly to be
numbered any longer among mortals. Like the Lord of Heaven with his archangels, so was the
dictator surrounded by his paladins. At his right hand stood the agile gnome with the profile of a
bird of pray, the deformed prophet, the eulogist, the insinuator and propagandist, who had the cleft
tongue of a snake and invented lies at the rate of one a minute. To the left of the Master stood the
obese giant, resting on his executioner's sword, blazing with medals and gold braid, every day
tricked out in a new fancy dress. While the little man on the right of the throne created the lies, the
fat man daily thought up surprises – for his own diversion and that of the people – entertainments,
executions.181
179 He was arguably nationalistic, struggled with feelings of nihilism throughout his life, was interested in the land and nature as
sacred ideals, and focused on militaristic themes in his writings. He was also celebrated as a hero by the National Socialists.
180 Mann, Mephisto, 183-184.
181 Ibid, 181-182.
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Individual descriptions of Hermann Göring and Joseph Goebbels present either man as a
disfigured monstrosity whose evil character is reflected through their menacing physical
presence. Mann describes Goering as an immensely fat giant who is both terrifying and
ludicrous, stating:
The smirk of even the boldest onlooker would fade at the thought of how much blood had already
flowed at the bidding of the fat giant, and what incalculable rivers of blood might yet flow in his
honour.182
Goebbels is similarly characterized as deformed monster, whose twisted birdlike
appearance inspires extreme fear and animosity, as Mann writes:
The minister of propaganda, overlord of the spiritual life of millions, limped nimbly through the
glittering throng which bowed down before him. An icy wind seemed to blow as he passed. It was
as though an evil, solitary and cruel god had clambered down among the everyday bustle of
pleasure-seeking, cowardly, pitiful mortals.183
Hitler is a more extreme example, who, in addition to being hypocritical and deceitful,
executes his most loyal comrades for being “too unmanageable.”184 Throughout Mephisto,
the Nazi leadership is presented in these and similar forms as immensely powerful, ugly,
and utterly devoid of moral scruples. By embodying the overwhelming force of evil that
had taken hold of Germany, Klaus Mann uses the Nazi leadership to establish an image of
evil for the surrounding narrative context.
The description of the Nazi leaders as larger-than-life personalities of immense
power is not unique to Mann's novel. Bertolt Brecht's Schweyk in the Second World War
presents a similar vision of Hitler and the Nazi high command as godlike beings who
stand above worldly events planning the fates of common men, (though his portrayal is
somewhat ambivalent towards their moral character, as they are more out-of-touch with
182 Ibid, 15.
183 Ibid, 11.
184 Mann writes: “He was the gentlest of men – he loved animals, never touched meat – but he could watch the execution of the most
loyal comrades without turning a hair.” Ibid, 247-248.
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reality than truly evil).185 A similar portrayal of Hitler's immense power is made in Arnold
Zweig's186 The Axe of Wandsbek,187 where the Nazi state is referred to as the “Empire of
the Sun-God Adolf” and it is later suggested that Hitler could even be the Antichrist.188
Zweig also attributes the Führer's power to enthral the masses through speech to a
supernatural gift:
That men should be capable, for hours together, of producing a succession of word-pictures, was
surely a little uncanny. In earlier days it would have signified that God or the Devil must have had
his finger in the game. [...] It was now described as the spirit of the Nordic race, the expression of
all that is most gloriously German. 189
The characterization of Nazi leaders as supernatural or godlike in appearance
relates to an element of historical reality, for Hitler was treated as a kind of Germanic
messiah by propagandists, and was the object of an adoring personality cult. The massive
Party rallies are but one example of Hitler's strategically planned larger-than-life persona,
as demonstrated in Triumph of the Will,190 a film by Leni Riefenstahl.191 In this artistic
documentary-style film based around the 1934 Nazi Party rally in Nuremburg, Hitler's
presence is first announced through the appearance of a plane, whose cruciform shadow
passes over the land, followed shortly after by Rudolf Hess' declaration to Hitler “You are
Germany!” The throngs of radiant faces, cries of joy, and communal ecstasy juxtaposed
185 Brecht, “Schweyk in the Second World War,” 111.
186 After serving on the Western Front during the First World War, Arnold Zweig (1887-1968) became a pacifist and academic. This,
in addition to being a Jew, made Zweig a natural target for persecution and as a result he went into exile after 1933. He eventually
settling in Palestine after relocating several times within Europe.
187 Written in 1943, The Axe of Wandsbek was inspired by a report read by the author in 1938. The narrative follows master-butcher
Albert Teetjen and his wife Stine, who, after collaborating with the Nazis and collecting a payment in return for conducting several
executions, become ostracized from their community and fall into disgrace; the disloyal, opportunistic, and indecent character of
the Nazi Party is revealed in the process.
188 Arnold Zweig, The Axe of Wandsbek, trans. Eric Sutton, (London; New York; Melbourne; Sydney; Cape Town: Hutchinson
International Authors Limited, 1948), 77, 328.
189 Ibid, 126-127.
190 Leni Riefenstahl, Triumph des Willens.
191 Leni Riefenstahl (1902-2003) was a German-born film director who is notable for her role in the creation of Triumph of the Will
(1934) and Olympia (1936). Either film exhibits prominent National Socialist ideological themes, and were utilized by the State as
propaganda. Though Riefenstahl repeatedly denied the propagandistic quality of her cinematic works, insisting instead that they
were documentaries of “pure history” and that her primary interest was in beauty, many art historians have countered her views,
citing both their historical function as propaganda, and the focus on beauty as an excuse for its noxious political meanings. Sontag,
“Fascinating Fascism,” 2-6.
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with Hitler's stern paternal gaze seems to reinforce this idea of the Führer as a superhuman being or divine German saviour.192
Overwhelming power was also an important aspect of Hitler's political appeal near
the end of the Weimar Republic when the National Socialist Party became associated with
the strict authority many believed was necessary to overcome Germany's social turmoil.
In this capacity, Hitler was credited with having restored German honour by destroying
the hated Versailles treaty. Hitler's use of propaganda was largely successful in
manoeuvring public opinion to strengthen his popularity, and his policies were often
supported by the people.193
Though National Socialism was a political movement and not a religion, many of
its characteristics resemble religion in form or feeling. An example of this can be found in
the ritualized 'German greeting' of “Heil Hitler” which could be translated to suggest
Hitler's spiritual role (as in 'best wishes to you in the name of Hitler').194 Despite Hitler's
criticisms of organized religion and insistence that National Socialism should not in any
way become a form of worship,195 many elements of the movement came to mimic
Christian forms of expression, such as a prayer written by Baldur von Schirach for the
Hitler Youth:
Adolf Hitler, we believe in Thee. Without Thee we would be alone. Through Thee we are a people.
Thou has given us the great experience of our youth, comradeship. Thou hast laid upon us the task,
the duty, and the responsibility. Thou has given us Thy Name (Hitlerjugend), the most beloved
Name that Germany has ever possessed. We speak it with reverence, we bear it with faith and
loyalty. Thou canst depend upon us, Adolf Hitler, Leader and Standard-Bearer. The Youth is Thy
Name. Thy Name is the Youth. Thou and the young millions can never be sundered. 196
192 Leni Riefenstahl (director), Triumph des Willens, film, German, 112 minutes, 1 VHS cassette, first distributed in Germany, 19341936, (Santa Monica, Calif.: Conoisseur Video Collection/An Esicma Corporation, 1992).
193 Gellately, Backing Hitler, 257-260.
194 Tilman Allert, The Hitler Salute: On the Meaning of a Gesture, (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2005), 42.
195 Hitler states: “[...] there will never be any possibility of National Socialism's setting out to ape religion by establishing a form of
worship. Its one ambition must be scientifically to construct a doctrine that is nothing more than a homage to reason.” Hitler,
(September 23, 1941), Hitler's Table Talk, 32.
196 (Quoted in) Julius Yourman, “Propaganda Techniques Within Nazi Germany,” Journal of Educational Sociology, vol. 13, no. 3,
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This, combined with the idolization of Hitler's image and his widely quoted infallibility
fostered an idea of the Führer as an omnipresent figure of godlike authority.197
These characteristics suggest a pseudo-religious belief in Hitler that warrants a
treatment of his views as the basis for a Hitler-worshipping system of racialist belief. As
the power of the Nazi Party increased during the Second World War (1939-1945), Hitler's
will became an irresistible force in German society. Thus, the anti-Nazi literary depictions
of Hitler as the cruel patriarch of a racist theocracy were in many ways an accurate
reflection of historical reality.
As a contrast, many authors also bring focus to Hitler's petty personal flaws,
which serves to undermine the Führer's aura of invincibility. Klaus Mann's Mephisto,
which also presents the Führer as a figure of immense authority, describes Hitler's
physical presence as ordinary and unflattering:
Power incarnate had an insignificant receding forehead, over which fell the legendary greasy
strand of hair, and dead staring eyes. The face of Power was putty-white, bloated porous. Power
had a very ordinary nose – a vulgar nose [...] Under the brown shirt swelled a flabby stomach. [...]
Power used long words to impress the actor with its “education.” [...] The result was like a zealous
schoolboy's lesson carefully learned by heart.198
Similarly, in Zweig's The Axe of Wandsbek, the character of 'Albert Teetjen' (a Party
member) describes his underwhelming impression of Hitler as “a dull, ordinary, stocky
little man, with the wild and glittering eyes of a mouse” whose violent and brutish speech
leaves only a bad impression.199 In an unrelated episode from the same novel, the
character of 'Käte Neumeier' (a member of the professional class, opposed to the Nazi
regime) concludes that Hitler must be insane after examining his Mein Kampf, and
(Education Under Nazism, Nov., 1939), 152.
197 Bytwerk, Bending Spines, 15-16, 41.
198 Mann, Mephisto, 243.
199 Zweig, The Axe of Wandsbek, 158.
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comparing its paranoid theories to those of a known lunatic.200
The appearance of Nazi leaders in Lion Feuchtwanger's novels also serve as
symbols of corrupt power. In Double, Double, Toil and Trouble, Hitler is described as a
charismatic speaker with shallow personality. His power to mesmerize the masses is
likened to that of a stage-magician who wins the audience without fail, but remains little
more than an actor at heart. Feuchtwanger was an author who saw the Third Reich with
considerable clarity and attributed much of the success of Nazism to Hitler's ability to
capitalize on the fears and desires of the masses during moments of crisis, and to operate
beyond the scope of conventional human behaviour. This idea is also found in
Feuchtwanger's earlier work, The Oppermanns, in which Nazi power is attributed to their
willingness to break from the conventions of civilized behaviour, as the author relates:
[...] our opponents have one tremendous advantage over us; their absolute lack of fairness. That is
the very reason why they are in power today. They have always employed such primitive methods
that the rest of us simply did not believe them possible, for they would not have been possible in
any other country.201
In addition to providing a social commentary on contemporary political affairs,
descriptions of the Nazi leadership are used to characterize the environment or setting in
which narrative-events unfold. In the world presented through anti-Nazi literature, reality
is shaped by Hitler and his fellowship of commanders, who appear as heavily flawed and
entirely corrupt beings of unstoppable power. Though the political leadership plays an
important role in several works, they are never the centre of focus; In most cases they
exist as an absent-presence whose authority is only felt through symbols and agents of
their power. In this way, characterizations of the Nazi leadership serve to personify the
spirit of brutality and hypocrisy that define the social environment of the Third Reich.
200 Ibid, 180, 188.
201 Feuchtwanger, The Oppermanns, 168.
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Powerlessness and cruelty
Closely associated with these portrayals of political power is the depiction of
powerlessness in anti-Nazi literature, as expressed by authors through the related themes
of imprisonment, torture, and police brutality. Unlike characterizations of the Nazi
leadership, descriptions of the prisoner experience demonstrate concern for the immediate
physical threats posed to individual by the state.
For example, in Lion Feuchtwanger's The Oppermanns, the most poignant
expression of Nazi power is the image of the concentration camp prisoner as a human
marionette doll, flailing about under the command of an evil master. This is imagined by
the character of Gustav Oppermann, a once prosperous Jewish man who had been forced
into exile. Shortly after leaving Germany, Gustav returns to Germany wishing to better
understand what had befallen his homeland, and what manner of resistance was taking
place. His findings prove a disappointment, and he is soon arrested with false documents
and sent to a concentration camp where he is tortured and subjected to forced labour.
Over time he is transformed into an obedient mindless puppet, completely subjugated to
the will of his tormentors. Though he survives and escapes into exile, the experience of
complete powerlessness in the grip of overwhelming evil leaves him a broken man.202
Stephan Zweig203 is another author who commented on the prisoner experience in
his 1942 novella, The Royal Game,204 which relates the story of a mysterious chess master
who had been an accountant in Austria during the 1938 annexation. He is imprisoned by
202 Ibid, 379-405.
203 Stefen Zweig (1881-1942) was a renowned German-Jewish author, playwright and journalist. He became a pacifist during the
First World War, and he would remain so for the remainder of his life. After fleeing into exile, Zweig and his wife committed
suicide together in 1942. Leon Botstein, “Stefan Zweig and the Illusion of the Jewish European,” Jewish Social Studies , vol. 44,
no. 1 (Winter, 1982), 63-65.
204 First published in 1942, The Royal Game tells the story of a reclusive Austrian chess master aboard a transport ship off the coast of
South America. The chess master had been arrested by the Nazis and held in solitary confinement and interrogated repeatedly,
eventually causing a mental break to occur due to his isolation.
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Nazi authorities and held in confinement without any interaction or mental occupation as
a form of torture, and, as the chess master describes, is slowly driven towards madness:
In a concentration camp you might have had to cart stones, perhaps, until your hands bled and your
feet froze in your shoes. You might have been crammed together with two dozen others, stinking
and shivering. But you would have seen faces, had a field, a square, a tree, a star, something,
anything, to look at; instead of here, where everything was never changing, always the same,
always unbearably the same. There was nothing here that could release me from my thoughts, from
my obsession with them, from my pathological reiteration of them. And that was exactly what they
intended. I was to choke and choke on my thoughts until they asphyxiated me [...] 205
Zweig presents the Nazis as sophisticated torturers who are capable of specializing their
method of torment to fit the needs of a given situation; in the case of the narrator this
means breaking his mental resolve over a long and arduous duration of imprisonment.
A similar description is found in Hans Fallada's Every Man Dies Alone, during an
episode in which the character Otto Quangel is awaiting execution and experiences the
psychological terror of complete powerlessness:
There is a monstrous cruelty in the way fear is spun out over days, weeks, months. [...] it's a
question of cruelty, of sadism, of barbarism. They don't beat you up in this establishment, don't
torture you physically; here the poison is dribbled imperceptibly into you. They don't want to let
your soul out of the clutches of death for a single minute.206
In this work, torture is remorseless and sadistic, but also bureaucratic and impersonal;
even the the Gestapo detective is sickened by the treatment of prisoners.207
In addition, Hans Fallada's largely autobiographical work, The Drinker208 offers a
veiled commentary on the prisoner experience during the Third Reich. The narrator is a
middle-class grocery owner who experiences financial difficulties and responds by
becoming a severe alcoholic. He recounts his fall from grace as a result of addiction
205 Stefan Zweig, “The Royal Game,” The Royal Game and Other Stories, trans. Jill Sutcliffe, (New York; London: Holmes & Meier,
2000), 22-23.
206 Fallada, Every Man Dies Alone, 475.
207 Ibid, 149.
208 Written in 1944 while the author was incarcerated at Alt-Sterlitz prison for the attempted murder of his wife, Fallada wrote The
Drinker in a code which was not deciphered until after the war, and was not published until 1950. The novel is heavily
autobiographical and relates the story of a grocery owner who falls on hard times and quickly destroys his life's work by becoming
an alcoholic, squandering his savings, and abusing his wife. This is followed by his incarceration in prison and eventual committal
to an insane asylum, where he purposefully infects himself with tuberculosis in order that he should die.
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which leads towards his complete ruin and eventual imprisonment. Since the novel was
written inside Germany during the Second World War, the author was unable to make
overt criticisms of the State, but the subversive messages of this work are fairly clear.
This is especially true during the last stages of the narrators incarceration at a mental
hospital, which is described as a place without hope or justice, where “blind obedience”
and “iron discipline” prevail as the basic rules of existence. In the narrator's voice, Fallada
writes:
[...] I realized how helplessly I stood at the mercy of gigantic and pitiless powers, powers without
heart, without compassion, without human qualities. I was caught in a great machine and nothing
that I did or felt was of any more consequence, the machine would run its unalterable course, I
might laugh or cry, the machine would take no notice.209
This theme of being caught within a relentless machine is a common subject found in
many anti-Nazi works, which also relates to the prospect of resistance against evil.210
Though the self-destructive behaviour of Fallada's protagonist serves as a confession of
guilt, the description of the prison system and mental hospital also acts as a criticism of
the brutality, inhumanity, and hopelessness of everyday life within the fascist police-state.
The plight of the innocent before the might of cruel authority figures is also a
major theme of Erika Mitterer's The Prince of Darkness. The character of Theresa Nothaft
is used in this novel to embody youthful innocence, but is accused of witchcraft,
condemned and imprisoned, tortured, and finally executed. The Inquisitor in this work is
the primary force of evil, and provides an interesting characterization of corrupted
authority. He is an agent of religious power, and is never accosted by moral qualms or
feelings of self-doubt. Moreover, he survives the novel unharmed; he is never made
accountable or punished in any form, and the innocent are never saved. While the overt
209 Hans Fallada, The Drinker, trans. Charlotte and A. L. Lloyd, (London: Putnam & Co. Ltd., 1952), 175.
210 For further discussion on the questionable prospect of personal freedoms, see page 145.
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narrative is a criticism of the Church patriarchy and papal Inquisition, Mitterer used the
veil of historical fiction to criticize the Nazi state, and in this way, criticisms directed
against the irrational fear of Satan and associated persecution of social undesirables are
easily transferred to Hitler's persecution of Jews and dissidents.
The persecution of 'outsiders' and brutal treatment of prisoners described in the
works of Feuchtwanger, Zweig, Fallada, and Mitterer (to name a few), reflects the harsh
reality of civilian persecution under Hitler's reign. The Nazis strategically targeted
“objective enemies” whose victimization stemmed not from misdeeds, but from the
nature of their identity.211 The identity of objective enemies could change according to
circumstance, and may have included considerations of physical form, ethnicity,
ideological view, or social status. Historian Robert Gallately notes that early acts of
persecution targeted the mentally ill, communists, and Jews, but soon expanded to include
a whole host of other 'social outsiders'.212 With time, as the Nazi Party increased its
position of power and opposition dwindled, persecutions became increasingly brutal as
definitions of treason were broadened to include a greater number of crimes, including
such banal charges as “malicious gossip” and the vaguely defined 'asocial' (which could
indicate any person who went against the Nazi-defined concept of good citizenship).213
The persecution of enemies was not kept secret by the Nazis, who promoted
hatred and violence as the necessary evils of the Aryan struggle. Public awareness of Nazi
brutality was demonstrated on the 'night of the long knives',214 which revealed to the
211 Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 547-549.
212 Robert Gellately and and Nathan Stolzfus (eds.), Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany, (New Jersey; Oxfordshire (UK): Princeton
University Press, 2001), 11-12.
213 Gellately, Backing Hitler, 12, 20-21.
214 A 1934 internal purge of National Socialist ranks, which amounted to a brutal massacre. It was directed primarily against Ernst
Röhm and the Sturmabteilung (SA) para-military group, and was a very public event.
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world the level of violence Hitler was capable of. Hitler respected the use of violence in
politics, and even expressed admiration for the communists' willingness to use “terror and
force” to win their arguments.215 Despite this, popular support for Hitler was maintained
thanks largely to a propaganda narrative which framed such harshness as necessary for
the protection society and preservation of good order.
The brutality of Hitler's government increased near the end of the Third Reich, as
the condition of 'total war' meant social life was treated with the severity of the
battlefield, and even minor violations of law could result in execution. This was out of
consideration for the front-line soldiers who faced death in battle; in return, Hitler
believed the civilian population should expect little mercy when they violated the law.216
In this vein, Hannah Arendt argues that it is typical of totalitarian governments to rule in
the style of a foreign conqueror, even in their own homeland, a pattern which holds true
for Hitler and the Nazis.217
Theorist Hannah Arendt perceived Nazi violence as both a political instrument for
repressing dissent, and as a reflection of the social environment during the Weimar
Republic. Political violence, she writes, “had becomes a kind of philosophy through
which to express frustration, resentment, and blind hatred, a kind of political
expressionism...”.218 The violence of brutality could also be attributed to a basic desire to
live beyond the facade of bourgeois hypocrisy, and to accept the destructive urges that
215 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 53-54.
216 Hitler states: “If the slightest attempt at a riot were to break out at this moment anywhere in the whole Reich, I'd take immediate
measures against it. Here's what I'd do: a) on the same day, all the leaders of the opposition, including the leaders of the Catholic
party, would be arrested and executed; b) all the occupants of the concentration camps would be shot within three days; c) all the
criminals on our lists – and it would make little difference whether they were in prison or at liberty – would be shot within the
same period. [...] As for the justification of these summary executions, I've only to think of the German idealists who are risking
their lives in front of the enemy or showing their devotion in a war factory, whatever their job may be, and employing all their
efforts for the victory of the fatherland.” Hitler, (April 7, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 308-309.
217 Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 539.
218 Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 439.
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dwelt inside the frustrated individual.219 Alternatively, Jacques Ellul interprets Nazi
violence as an example of “action for action's sake;” that political actions served as an
accessory to propaganda by aiding in the mobilization of the masses and thereby
furthering the Party's empowerment.220 Regardless of the motivation behind acts of terror,
Nazi brutality amounted to a criminalization of everyday life and widespread
victimization of the civilian population.
In anti-Nazi literature, criticisms of brutality were also made through descriptions
of those immediately responsible for physical violence against civilians, namely torturers
and interrogators. In The Prince of Darkness, Erika Mitterer speculates on the mentality
of a torturer, presenting him as internally conflicted but also unwilling to challenge the
will of his superiors:
The screams of the tortured rang in his ears long after he had left the fetid chamber and was out in
the bright autumnal street. He began to worry – was everything true that the tortured women
screamed aloud when they were practically out of their minds with pain? But he rejected such
thoughts angrily. To brood over it is not one of your duties, he told himself. That's what the
educated men are for. But his thoughts were as pesky as fleas and just as difficult to squelch. 221
Though he is not inherently cruel, sense of duty and peer-pressure compels him to behave
as an unthinking brute, and over time he undergoes a process of moral hardening which
lends itself to greater acts of cruelty. Mitterer writes:
But now he had to get accustomed to inflicting, not a quick death on the guilty, but slow torture
and inescapable fear. As if it were in his power to free them, they raised their fettered hands up to
him and begged for mercy. And he, who knew that in his position pity was a sin, because it only
increased the misery of the victims, didn't want to soften, and in his defence became mean and
brutal.222
As a historical document that comments on the Third Reich, Mitterer suggests the lowlevel collaborators with Nazi crimes – the police interrogators and street thugs – were not
219 Ibid, 443-444.
220 Ellul, Propaganda, 195-198.
221 Mitterer, The Prince of Darkness, 580-581.
222 Ibid, 581.
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necessarily motivated by cruel or sadistic desires, but rather, by their passive obedience
towards social pressures.
Other anti-Nazi authors write in agreement with this perspective, such as Bertolt
Brecht whose Fear and Misery of the Third Reich presents the character of a torturer as a
normal man dutifully bound to the will of a cruel overseer.223 As a contrast, Erich Maria
Remarque presents the Nazi torturer as a purely sadistic and immoral figure in his novel,
Arch of Triumph. In this work, Ravic, the cynical protagonist, is the former prisoner of a
Nazi concentration camp living in Paris as an exile. During a climactic moment of
traumatic memory recall, he imagines himself confronting his former interrogator and
recounts the crimes he and other prisoners had been forced to endure. Through all of his
memories of pain and suffering, the image of the interrogator's smiling face emerges as
the epitome evil.224 In this capacity, the torturer is presented as a sadistic criminal whose
evil could not be redeemed.
It is not surprising that the prisoner experience was treated with such prominence
in anti-Nazi literature, as the concentration camps and prison system were a very real and
terrifying threat used in the suppression of dissent. While historian Robert Gallately notes
that the concentration camps were not openly discussed by German media after the
outbreak of war, there was still everyday evidence of their existence conveyed through
their proximity to outside communities and the rumours that circulated around them.225
Authors would have known of the prison-camps and had a personal reason to fear them,
as is reflected through the animosity by which they are described.
223 Brecht, “Fear and Misery of the Third Reich,” 26-27.
224 Remarque, Arch of Triumph, 394.
225 Gellately, Backing Hitler, 204.
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Themes relating to the powerlessness of victims and the cruelty of perpetrators are
used to highlight the unnecessary pain and suffering inflicted by the Nazis against the
civilian population as a result of their brutal authority. While some individual perpetrators
are given focus as embodiments of sadistic evil, the overarching focus of criticism with
regards to cruelty stems from the imbalance of power brought to Germany as a result of
Nazi rule.
Conclusion
In anti-Nazi literature, power is overwhelmingly blamed for having facilitated
evil. Though the Nazis' political leadership is presented as immeasurably corrupt, ugly,
and even stupid, they retain immense power and are left free to commit any excess they
please. This is due largely to the fundamental injustice of their worldview (described in
chapter one) which not only removes the citizen's traditional protective barriers (such as a
fair trial), but encourages acts of cruelty against supposed 'enemies' of the state.
According to anti-Nazi literature, propaganda was used to spread the infectious Nazi
worldview, but force was the means by which it became a reality, as reflected through the
new laws governing behaviour and abilities granted the police. Power made the Nazis
unstoppable, so much so that the personality of the Nazi leadership is used to embody the
character of Germany's harsh new reality.
In contrast with this view, Nazi propaganda presented power as an essential tool in
resisting evil, and that the use of brutal force merely reflected the brutality of natural law.
In this context, lack of power could even be viewed as a cause of evil, for it was the Jews'
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supposed weakness which prevented them from surviving independently, forcing them to
to leech off the accomplishments of other peoples. Thus, to the Nazis, power was not only
essential for preserving the race, it was an essential virtue defining Germanic 'goodness'.
While both worldviews agree that the Nazis were powerful and capable of extreme
brutality, a crucial element which forces them into opposition is the rejection of belief in
the supposed race-struggle by anti-Nazi authors.
In the previous chapter, it was argued that authors did not view the Nazis' belief in
propaganda as genuine; the Nazis were presented as skilled liars who used
misinformation and coercion to manipulate the public, and that every argument they made
was a deceptive facade. As such, most authors do not address the official claims of the
Nazis directly, leaving the problem of Antisemitism largely unexamined.226 In most cases,
Antisemitism is mentioned in passing along with other Nazi crimes, and is typically
presented as another symptom of the Nazis' dishonesty. Since the Germanic race's
struggle for survival against Jewish oppression was the principle argument that lent
legitimacy to the Nazi cause, rejecting the authenticity of their belief turned every
extreme action into a demonstration of unjustified brutality.
226 One exception is Lion Feuchtwanger's The Oppermanns which does focus particular attention on the persecution of Jews, but even
here it is not the only focus of his novel.
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CHAPTER 3
Nazism and the Struggle Between Good and Evil
In light of the perceptions of evil described in the last two chapters, it was only
natural for Nazi propagandists and anti-Nazi writers to envision the Third Reich as the
object of a great struggle between good and evil. For the Nazis, this meant striving to
achieve the social and political aims of their cause, while at the same time working to
thwart the supposed evil of the 'international Jewish conspiracy'. Conversely, the pursuit
of goodness in spite of the overwhelming power of the Third Reich is a central theme of
conflict in most works of anti-Nazi literature. A distinct understanding of humanity lay at
the heart of either perspective, which extended to their respective view of ideals and the
individual's relation to the state. The Nazis' racialist beliefs led them to see humanity in
black and white as clearly divided between forces of absolute good and absolute evil. By
contrast, anti-Nazi authors depict humanity in various shades of grey, often suggesting
that social context played a powerful role in determining individual behaviour relative to
the state. Moreover, while the Nazi perspective set limitations governing the behaviour of
the masses (as established by their innate characteristics), anti-Nazi authors focus on free
will as it applied to individuals, and present the freedom to choose one's own path as the
last refuge for hope in the Third Reich.
Visions of society in Nazi propaganda
The social vision of the Nazis, pertaining to the supposed struggle between good
and evil, should be regarded within the context of their primary concern: winning and
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maintaining power. Since Hitler modelled himself as the hero of the people, winning the
support of the masses – or at least maintaining the semblance of wide-spread public
support – was crucial to his political image. As time passed and Europe became
embroiled in the Second World War, the military needs of the state forced martial ideals
(such as duty and self-sacrifice) to the fore as the most important German virtues. In these
regards, propagandists framed the Nazi movement as part of a noble struggle between
good and evil, which also served as a tool to motivate the masses, enticing them on the
one hand with promises of a utopian future, and threatening them on the other with
visions of terror in the event of defeat. The underlying significance of this theme was the
suggestion that good and evil existed in fixed terms; that the Germans were necessarily
good and the enemy were necessarily evil, and that either status was not so much a matter
of choice as it was a fact of identity.
The utopian dream of Nazism as a reflection of the people's will
Harnessing the power of the masses by gaining their support was essential to the
political success of the Nazi cause. To entice supporters, propagandists presented
Germans with their grand vision of an idealized society based on the collective will of the
people. This social ideal anticipated the emotional needs of the masses, and provided
them with a solution to their feelings of alienation, insecurity, and bitterness. Moreover,
their Utopian dream was presented as an achievable prospect which could be brought
about through a united effort, though human nature would require engineering in order to
do so.227
227 Bytwerk, Bending Spines, 38.
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As should be expected, race also played a central role in the design of the Nazis'
utopia. Establishing belief in Antisemitism and implementing eugenic practices was
presented as a crucial first step towards perfecting society. According to Hitler’s logic,
this was because the offspring of mixed-race couplings would necessarily result in a
“lowering of the standard of the higher race” and the “physical and mental regression” of
the people.228 Thus, it can be concluded that the Nazis believed the will of the people
could not be carried through until the people themselves had been purified.
After a process for purifying the race had been established,229 the only essential
contribution from the masses that was needed to create the ideal society was belief in
National Socialism. Since it was believed that the enthusiastic support for Nazism by a
majority of the people would empower the Party organization, this requirement was
essential to all of their political ambitions, including the perfection of society. In this
regard, Hitler emphasized the political importance of the masses, and wished to present
the power of National Socialism as an outpouring of the people’s will. He states:
The man who means to act must find his support in faith, and faith is found only in the people. The
great masses have no mercy, they go straight ahead with the simplicity of innocence. We have seen
what a people is capable of, when it is led. All possibilities exist in it, for good as well as for evil.
The duty of National Socialism inevitably boils down to this: all that is best in the people should be
allowed ceaselessly to develop.230
Beyond these prerequisites of racial purity and Party enthusiasm, the precise
character of the the Nazis' social ideal is best understood through the example set by their
mass political rallies. As well as celebrating Nazi ideology, these massive events were
intended to serve as an ideal environment for converting new members to the movement,
as Hitler makes clear:
228 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 392.
229 Laws governing marriage rights and the persecution of Jews are two such examples.
230 Hitler, (21 Sept, 1941), Hitler's Table Talk, 30.
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The 'community' of the mass rally strengthens not only the individual, but binds together all, and
helps create party spirit [...] When a participant enters a mass gathering for the first time and
suddenly has tens of thousands of men with the same views around him; when he, as one who is
'seeking' is swept along with the mighty effect of a suggestive ecstasy of three or four thousand
others [...] then he himself lies under the magical influence of mass suggestion [...] he has become
a member of the 'new community'.231
In this way, the Nazi rally should be viewed as a highly symbolic event that represented
their vision for a model society.
One of the best examples of Nazi propaganda demonstrating the social ideal of the
'new community' is found in Leni Riefenstahl's documentary style film, Triumph of the
Will, which documents the 1934 Party rally at Nuremburg. While its objectives are
disputed, Riefenstahl’s film focuses attention on the masses in such a manner that an
impression of the powerful emotional appeal of Nazism is conveyed. In the film, the
crowd appears rapturously entranced in the presence of the Führer, as if standing before a
messiah. Other than direct focus on Hitler and other Party leaders, individuals are given
only brief moments of attention, but are used to show the emotional joy and enthusiasm
of supporters. In Triumph of the Will, cheering crowds of jubilant spectators chant in
unison and are viewed from above as a great collective mass whose saluting and
marching legions take on the dizzying appearance of an enormous single entity. The
singular identity or collective will of the mass, which also embodies the essence of 'the
new community', can be understood as the underlying meaning of the film.
This depiction of collective will was meant to show the empowerment of the
people, but it also serves as a demonstration of mass conformity. In abandoning their
individual identities by joining together before their leader, the participants of the rally
would come to embody the strength of the 'new community' through demonstrations of
231 Simon Taylor, “Symbol and Ritual under National Socialism,” The British Journal of Sociology, vol. 32, no. 4, (London:
Blackwell Publishing, Dec. 1981), 512.
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obedience. Thus, in addition to lending an appearance of legitimacy to Hitler's
government, the Nazi political rally emphasized the weakness of individuality next to the
great power of the mass.232
Since the notion of documentary realism in Triumph of the Will was part of its
propaganda value, the impression of the people's enthusiasm was made to appear
spontaneous, though the 1934 Party rally was in fact a carefully arranged and orchestrated
event.233 However, regarding propaganda's objective of social control, reality was
secondary to the presentation of reality, and in this way, participants of the rally can be
viewed as symbolic objects used to advertise National Socialist values.234 In this vein,
cultural theorist, Siegfried Kracauer, identifies the phenomenon of the Party rally as “the
mass ornament,” which he describes as “the rational and empty form of the cult, devoid
of explicit meaning.”235 Kracauer argues that the objective of the mass ornament was for
its own end, for it did not arise naturally from a spontaneous occurrence, and its sole
purpose was for the demonstration of an immense pattern of human bodies, glorifying
obedience and conformity, while undermining the independence of the individual.236
This interpretation of the Nazi political rally is supported by Hitler’s perception of
the masses as irrational and driven by emotion, as he suggests: “The great mass of a
people consists neither of professors nor diplomats. The small abstract knowledge it
possesses directs its sentiments rather to the world of feeling.”237 Rational objectivity was
seen as a form of weakness by Nazi propagandists who promoted fanaticism as a more
232 Sontag, “Fascinating Fascism,” 8; Taylor, “Symbol and Ritual under National Socialism,” 512.
233 Thomas Elsaesser, “Leni Riefenstahl: The Body Beautiful, Art Cinema and Fascist Aesthetics,” Women and Film: A Sight and
Sound Reader, eds. Pam Cook and Philip Dodd, (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1993), 192.
234 Taylor, “Symbol and Ritual under National Socialism,” 512.
235 Siegfried Kracauer, The Mass Ornament: Weimar Essays, ed. Thomas Levin, (Printed in the United States of America: The
President and Fellows of Harvard College, 1995), 84.
236 Ibid, 75-85.
237 Quoted in: Mosse, Nazi Culture, 8.
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honest reflection of their Party spirit. Furthermore, political theorist Hannah Arendt
argues that one reason the masses were drawn to Nazism was for the allure of escape
from the everyday problems of their lives by letting go of reason and joining in with
something magical.238 Along these lines, Hitler argued that making an emotional
impression on the people through his and the Party’s aura of power was the surest means
of winning their hearts, for they bore the submissive traits of 'feminine irrationality':
Like a woman, whose psychic feeling is influenced less by abstract reasoning than by an
undefinable, sentimental longing for complementary strength, who will submit to the strong man
rather than dominate the weakling, thus the masses love the ruler rather than the suppliant, and
inwardly they are far more satisfied by a doctrine which tolerates no rival than by the grant of
liberal freedom they often feel at a loss what to do with it, and even easily feel themselves
deserted.239
In keeping with Hitler's views, the characteristics of the 'new community' were
determined largely by how propagandists perceived the masses, as well as how they
wished them to be. While the degree by which the success of Nazism relied upon its use
of propaganda is a matter for debate, Hitler viewed it as incredibly important to their
cause, and placed great emphasis on the need for propagandists to properly understand the
masses. This was in order for propaganda to reach its full effect, for public opinion was
thought to be more easily manoeuvred in directions that agreed with its prevailing trends.
This view is shared by cultural theorist Jacques Ellul, who also argues that the political
leader whose rule relies on their effective use of propaganda must have a close
understanding of society in order to maintain an appearance of serving public opinion
while at the same time directing it.240
According to Ellul, the Nazis approached society by regarding the masses
according to their assumed common traits. For this purpose the middle class – which was
238 Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 458.
239 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 56.
240 Ellul, Propaganda, 124.
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poor enough to be average but rich enough to be educated – served as an “average
society” to gauge prevailing trends.241 There were a number of concerns which
particularly affected Germany's middle class during the lead-up to Hitler's reign,
including a pronounced fear of communism, the desire for security and economic
stability, a lingering sense of injustice over the Versailles treaty, and a desire for prestige
on the world stage. Some historians, including Martin Broszat, have argued that the Nazis
owed their popularity more to social fears of communism and a desire for Germany's
economic rehabilitation than to notions of race or appeals to nationalism.242 It can also be
surmised that the collective experience brought through participation with the Nazi
movement would have had a powerful emotional impact on supporters, which might have
compensated for its relatively weak political theory and contributed significantly to its
overall success.
The idea of becoming part of the 'new community' was intended to inspire feelings
of joy and hope through participation with something grand, and of being special due to
one's association with the movement rather than one's individuality. It was also presented
as a choice, though appearing to support the Nazi Party became compulsory for survival
in the Third Reich as fear of persecution increased. In this way, the 'new community'
served as an ideal to entice supporters as well as a tool to repress opposition, for any
individual suspected of harbouring anti-Nazi feeling (and thus an outsider to the 'new
community') could automatically be considered an enemy to Germany. Thus, as the
241 Ibid, 34-39, 67, 105-106.
242 According to historian Martin Broszat, “For the millions of new Hitler voters, who (more for psychological reasons than material
ones) wanted nothing to do with the Marxist parties and who overwhelmingly adopted an apolitical, ult-nationalist stance, voting
for the NSDAP meant not so much a deliberate acknowledgement of National Socialist ideology as a rejection of the existing
circumstances and the approval of the Hitler movement as probably the strongest force for change.” Broszat, The Hitler State, 2728.
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supposed embodiment of the people's utopian ambitions, the 'new community' was a
powerful idea used to advance the political aims of the Party organization.
Martial values: duty and the nobility of self-sacrifice
The goal of forming the 'new community' relates to a second facet of the Nazis'
social ideal, which is the glorification of the military as the model on which society
should be structured. Just as the idea of the 'new community' was used to advance the
political needs of the Nazi Party, martial virtues were applied broadly to society in order
to match the needs of the state. This culminated in a celebration of duty and self-sacrifice
as the defining traits of noble Germanic identity. This also fed directly into the supposed
struggle between good and evil by establishing standards for the populace to follow when
enduring hardship as a result of war under Nazi rule.
Germany's militarization during the Third Reich stipulated that society should
reflect the function and structure of the army, as characterized by a utilitarian focus on
strict order, severe discipline, obedience, duty, and self-sacrifice.243 Thus, despite Hitler's
desire for authentic popular support, he also recognized the need for brutal force in
maintaining power, stating:
Man is not endowed by nature with the herd instinct, and it is only by the most rigorous methods
that he can be induced to join the herd. He has the same urge as the dog, the rabbit and the hare, to
couple up with one other being as a separate entity. The social State as such can be maintained only
by a rule or iron; take away the laws, and the fabric falls immediately to pieces.244
This “rule of iron” entailed harsh discipline and a generally militarized attitude towards
society which focused on the worth of citizens according to their use in the race war.
Accordingly, men were of value primarily as fighters, and women primarily as breeders.
243 Allert, The Hitler Salute, 47, 51.
244 Hitler, (29 August, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 507.
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It is also in relation to martial ideals that children were regarded as the greatest hope for
the future.
In educating the German youth, aspects of the military were adopted as the
standards of perfection that they should look to. The Schutzstaffel (SS), an elite
paramilitary organization, were particularly celebrated as the epitome of masculine
perfection, combining a dramatic and rigid appearance with extreme military discipline,
party ethic, and racial purity, thereby illustrating the aesthetic and moral ideals set by
Nazi theorists.245 Children were primed for susceptibility to National Socialism through
enforced idolization of such military figures as heroic, beautiful, and manly. Through
propaganda, manliness became associated with the Nazi Party, which in turn encouraged
young boys towards a belief in militarism and Antisemitism.246 The National Socialist
movement was particularly concerned with properly educating the youth, as it was
believed that only future generations raised without the taint of Judaism and modernity
could reach that ultimate goal of creating the perfect society.247
In its broadest terms, the social importance of the military related to its role as the
“breeding ground for the German virtues,” which included discipline, efficiency, even
disposition, courage, bold recklessness, perseverance, and unyielding honesty.”248 Nazi
theorists maintained that soldiers would adopt these virtues as a result of military service,
and then pass them on to society. Alfred Rosenberg,249 believed the essential German
virtues lay in such martial qualities as “personal honour,” the application of which, he
245 Peter Reichel, “Festival and Cult: Masculine and Militaristic Mechanisms of National Socialism,” 162.
246 Yourman, “Propaganda Techniques Within Nazi Germany,” 153.
247 “The youth of today, which in ten years, in twenty years from now will be the personification of the National Socialist idea, will
have known no other conception of the world, and they will be the product of an education which will make of them men welldisciplined and sure of themselves.” Hitler, (20 May, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 370.
248 Hitler, Hitler's Second Book, 31.
249 Alfred Rosenberg (1893-1946) was a senior Nazi bureaucrat who made important contributions to the formation of Nazi ideology.
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stated, “is what will decide our European future.”250 War itself was understood as a noble
enterprise that brought out the best in people, because it tested the individual's sense of
duty, demanded self-sacrifice, and, according to Hitler, exposed young heroes to “Fate's
hammer stroke.”251 Moreover, Hitler foresaw in war the essential ingredient for
establishing an unbreakable national legacy, stating in 1942 that, “The battlefields of this
war will be the cement which will bind into one indissoluble whole all the races of the
Greater German Reich.”252
Martial ideals were given visual representation through a variety of modes of
expression by Nazi artists, three exemplary cases being the sculptural reliefs of Arno
Breker,253 titled The Guard (fig.17), Kameraden, and Sacrifice (fig.18). In addition to
celebrating masculine strength and racial purity, these works were intended to depict the
heroic and ancient character of the dynamic male warrior. In The Guard, the figure of a
warrior stands poised for action, vigilant and ready for violence, his confident expression
suggesting the noble warrior archetype. In Sacrifice, the figure is that of a fallen soldier,
which celebrates death in battle as a tragic and heroic cost for the community's survival.
Kamaraden depicts a dead warrior next to his comrade-in-arms, who grieves yet seems
energetic and ready to carry on with battle.
In portraying these figures, Arno Breker was making an intentional allusion to
classical antiquity. Use of the nude sculptural form to depict the martial male and the
adoption of archaic weaponry (such as swords and shields) are common motifs of Greco-
250 Eric H. Vieler, The Ideological Roots of German National Socialism, (New York: Peter Lang, 1999), 56.
251 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 402-403.
252 Hitler, (20 May, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 371.
253 Arno Breker (1900-1991) was one of only two official state sculptors (the other being Josef Thorak). Works created by him during
the Third Reich for the purposes of celebrating Nazi virtues should be viewed as important pieces of artistic propaganda.
Petropoulos, The Faustian Bargain, 218.
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Roman artistic convention, which in this context are used to suggest the eternal virtues
and cultural sophistication of the National Socialist movement.254 As a form of
propaganda, artistic references to classical antiquity serve as a symbolic short-hand
signifying the highest ideals of European civilization. By tying the contemporary German
context to a glorified ancient past through martial themes, Breker's sculptural works
suggest the eternal virtues of the noble warrior, and that National Socialism was only the
most recent manifestation of an ancient struggle between civilization and chaos.255 All of
the heroic ideals on display in Breker's works relate to qualities that the masses would be
called upon to adopt during Germany's war, namely the demand for people to fight and
risk their lives, to endure the destruction of their property, and to sacrifice their children
and loved-ones for the sake of the national cause.
The theme of self-sacrifice, which is also prevalent in these works, relates to the
“cult of heroism” and worship of martyrs, a common them to Hitler's rule.256 Hitler
believed that more than any other martial quality, sense of duty and willingness to
perform acts of self-sacrifice in defence of the community (called Pflichterfüllung) were
the supreme virtues of the German race.257 He states:
We Germans have that marvellous source of strength – the sense of duty – which other peoples do
not possess. The conviction that, by obeying the voice of duty, one is working for the preservation
of the species, helps one to take the gravest decisions.258
The logic behind this admiration for self-sacrifice in relation to the struggle between good
and evil was similar to the rational that justified Nazi brutality, that is, in order to defeat
great evil, great acts of violence must be committed and endured. In the context of the
254 Mangan, “Icon of Monumental Brutality,” 140.
255 Yourman, “Propaganda Techniques Within Nazi Germany,” 50, 151.
256 Mangan, “Blond, Strong and Pure,” 117.
257 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 408-410.
258 Hitler, (20 November, 1941), Hitler's Table Talk, 104.
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Second World War, this meant encouraging the people to accept the inevitable sacrifice of
lives that would be needed in order to defeat their enemies.
The Third Reich and the rebirth of Antiquity
The use of classical imagery in visual propaganda relates to a third facet of the
Nazis' social vision: the rebirth of classical civilization in the modern age. Not only did
Nazi propagandists present their struggle as a defence of civilization, but as rebirth of
'true' European culture in art-forms borrowed from antiquity. As a form of propaganda,
classicism was emblematic of the ultimate form of goodness, and contributed meaning to
the Nazi movement as a struggle on behalf of civilization's highest ideals.
In accordance with nationalism, Hitler was eager to promote a uniquely German
culture that was deemed racially pure and held mass appeal. However, because National
Socialism was a new movement and had no preexisting culture to draw from, it was
necessary to borrow from existing forms.259 Among various historical ideals, Hitler
admired above all else the ancient Germanic tribes, as well as the Nordic peoples of late
antiquity and the Teutonic kingdoms of the medieval period. However, these epochs were
lacking the publicly recognized visual culture required by propagandists, and classically
themed art was adopted in its place.260
Artistic motifs derived from the ancient Greco-Roman world were already wellestablished in the public eye as symbols of civilization, and was attractive to
propagandists for its added associations with empire and longevity.261 Since, for the
259 David Elliot, “The Battle for Art,” Art and Power: Europe Under the Dictators 1930-45, eds. Dawn Ades, et. all, (Stuttgart,
Germany: Oktagon in association with Hayward Gallery, 1995), 33.
260 Berthold Hinz, “'Degenerate' and 'Authentic': Aspects of Art and Power in the Third Reich,” Art and Power: Europe Under the
Dictators 1930-45, eds. Dawn Ades, et. all, (Stuttgart, Germany: Oktagon in association with Hayward Gallery, 1995), 332.
261 Dawn Ades, “Art as Monument,” Art and Power: Europe Under the Dictators 1930-45, eds. Dawn Ades, et. all, (Stuttgart,
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purposes of propaganda, it was easier to adopt existing forms than it would be to create
something new, the National Socialists developed an iconography which sought to infuse
new meanings into traditional images, resembling classicism but signifying fascism.262
The intention was for the noble virtues associated with classical ideals to be transferred
through art to the Nazi movement, which in turn could be regarded as the defender of
traditional European values.263
It should be mentioned that references to a heroic past in nationalist propaganda
was not new or unique to the German fascists. Classical motifs were a common feature of
recruitment campaigns throughout Europe during the First World War, and martialthemed sculptural forms had a long tradition of representing national identities. However,
in combination with their racial theory, the Nazi usage presents a distinct view of the
classical past that was more than symbolic in meaning.264
Since Nazi theorists viewed culture as an extension of race, the Aryans (as the
superior race) were deemed responsible for all of European civilization's greatest
accomplishments. Thus, it followed that classical art was in fact the product of Aryan
skill, and that ancient Greco-Roman artists were in fact depicting the ancestors of modern
Germans.265 Alfred Rosenberg was one proponent of this view, stating, “There is no
universal art. Art is always a creation stemming from a certain blood.”266 Accordingly, the
rebirth of ancient ideals in modern man was promoted as part of the National Socialists’
utopian vision.
Germany: Oktagon in association with Hayward Gallery, 1995), 52.
262 Mangan, “Icon of Monumental Brutality,” 132.
263 Ellul, Propaganda, 140; Yourman, “Propaganda Techniques Within Nazi Germany,” 50, 151.
264 Mangan, “Icon of Monumental Brutality,” 128-130.
265 Mangan, “Blond, Strong and Pure,” 120-121.
266 (Quoted in) Vieler, The Ideological Roots of German National Socialism, 57.
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Suggestions of this vision can be found in Leni Riefenstahl's Olympia, a film
documenting the 1936 Berlin Olympic games.267 In the introductory sequence, remnants
of lost civilization (represented by weathered ruins and decaying sculptures) come to life
as attractive physically fit nudes. In addition to demonstrating the National Socialist
visual aesthetic, the sequence links the modern world to the past by suggesting the
classical age had been reawakened in the modern man.268 Hitler was aware of this notion,
as he regarded the focus of the ancient games on physical fitness and youth in
competition to be a suitable illustrations of his social vision.269 The Third Reich was to
herald the emergence of a 'new man' to match the 'new community'. Hitler states:
The new age of today is at work on a new human type. Men and women are to be more healthy,
stronger: there is a new feeling of life, a new joy in life. Never was humanity in its external
appearance and in its frame of mind nearer to the ancient world than it is today. 270
Another illustration of this view is found in the paintings of Adolf Zeigler,271
notably his Judgement of Paris, which portrays the climactic moment of decision from
the classical Greek myth in which the hero, Paris, must decide which of three female
goddesses is the most beautiful.272 Significantly, the work breaks convention by
portraying Paris as a modern man dressed in traditional German attire. In conjunction
with National Socialist ideology, this leads to a suggestion that the spirit of the ancient
world was alive in modern Germans. Since modern Germans were thought of as the
267 Leni Riefenstahl (director), Olympia, film, English language version of Olympische Spiele, 199 minutes, 2 VHS cassettes, first
distributed in Germany, 1936-1938, (Chicago, IL.: Home Vision Cinema, 1997).
268 Hinz, “'Degenerate' and 'Authentic',” 333.
269 The games themselves also served as a useful propaganda platform for the Nazis to advertise German greatness and to display
their Party’s iconography to the world. Ian Boyd Whyte, “Berlin, 1 May 1936,” Art and Power: Europe Under the Dictators 193045. eds. Dawn Ades, et. all, (Stuttgart, Germany: Oktagon in association with Hayward Gallery, 1995), 43.
270 (Quoted in) Mosse, Nazi Culture, 15.
271 Adolf Ziegler, (1892-1959), the one time president of the Reich Chamber of Fine Arts, he was a classically traind and highly
skilled painter who became a prominent figure in the cultural institutions of the Third Reich.
272 The story is part of the Trojan war saga, an ancient Greek myth. Paris, a young Trojan prince, must judge the three goddesses –
Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite – to determine which is most beautiful. He is tempted by each with promises of a reward: Hera offers
him power, Athena offers knowledge, and Aphrodite offers the most beautiful woman in the world. Paris chooses Aphrodite,
receives Helen of Sparta as a reward, but also earns the animosity of the Greeks and the two snubbed goddesses, Hera and Athena.
The story is used to explain the origins of the Trojan war.
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inheritors of civilization's cultural flame, the ancient Greek hero and the modern German
man could thus be viewed as interchangeable figures.
Visual representations of ancient myths also provided a convenient opportunity for
Nazi artists to use images of nude figures to emphasize physical beauty as a reflection of
moral and racial worth. Ziegler was particularly well known for his female nudes, and
was nicknamed 'the master of pubic hair' by his contemporaries.273 However, beauty in
Nazi art invariably becomes a depiction of racial ideals, and in Judgement of Paris this
can be seen through the figures of the goddesses, who display many traits of racial
feminine beauty (they are blond, white, physically fit, attractive and passive). In
displaying contemporary German subjects alongside classical themes, Nazi artists
exemplify both the European cultural tradition and the ideological emphasis on innate
physical traits as the measure of human worth.274
Another key facet of the Nazis' celebration of classicism was its effect on the
German cultural world, which amounted to a repression of modernism by the state. Since
artists were thought to represent characteristics of the people as a whole, it was believed
that their works typified the German race.275 As a consequence, Hitler's government
adopted a practice of “cultural eugenics,” which entailed the selective elimination or
promotion of certain aspects of German artistic life. This was accomplished by requiring
that artists must join the Reichskulturkammer (Reich Chamber of culture) in order to find
employment, which the Nazis controlled.276
In this way, the use of classical motifs in Nazi art should also be understood as a
273 Michaud, The Cult of Art in Nazi Germany, 93.
274 Whyte, “Berlin, 1 May 1936,” 42; Dawn Ades, “Art as Monument,” 52-53; Mangan, “Icon of Monumental Brutality” 130.
275 Joan L Clinefelter, Artists for the Reich: Culture and Race from Weimar to Nazi Germany. Oxford: Berg, 2005, 85.
276 Steinweis, “The Nazi Purge of German Artistic and Cultural Life,” 100-103.
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politically motivated conservative reaction against modernist trends in culture, which
Hitler regarded as 'un-German' and symptomatic of all that was rotten and weak in
Weimar society.277 Modern art was international instead of national, disturbing where it
should be ennobling, and ugly where it should be beautiful.278 Hitler also saw the
prominence of modernism as evidence of yet another attack by the Jews, who acted as
critics to artificially inflate the value of 'worthless' art, thereby cheapening 'true' art for
their own consumption.279
An exhibition of "Degenerate Art" (Entart Kunst) was organized in 1937 for the
very reason of proving the depravity of modern culture. Hitler had the power to crush
modernist artists, but he hoped to use their works to demonstrate the kind of cultural
decay and 'intellectual snobbery' the Nazis stood against. To emphasize the problem of
corruption in modern art and reinforce the link between culture and race, images of
physical deformity were put on display adjacent to modernist works. Opposition to
modernist culture was presented in these terms as part of Germany's 'racial healing'.280
By adapting propaganda to an existing artistic rivalry between traditional and
modernist modes of expression, National Socialism was able to insert its racial beliefs
into a well-established intellectual debate. The Nazis became defenders of tradition and in
the process adapted the visual language of classicism and romanticism to their own ends.
The idea of defeat as a vision of apocalypse
Through the combination of social, martial, and cultural ideals, propagandists
277 Steinweis, “The Nazi Purge of German Artistic and Cultural Life,” 100.
278 Mosse, Nazi Culture, 11-13.
279 Hitler, (March 27, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 280.
280 Hinz, “'Degenerate' and 'Authentic',” 330-332.
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hoped to convince the masses that the Nazi cause was being righteously fought in defence
of the highest standards of European civilization. The dark opposite to these ideals
appeared during the Second World War through depictions of the enemy. As the war
dragged on and became increasingly desperate, the black and white portrayal of
Germany's struggle as a conflict between good and evil rendered the prospect of defeat in
ever-more apocalyptic terms. According to propaganda, the enemy's victory would mean
the complete annihilation of Germany, the destruction of its culture, and the enslavement
or execution of its people. In this way, the Nazis offered the public two alternative visions
for the future: either the Nazis would prevail, heralding the beginning of a new golden
age; or Germany would be defeated, and in the ensuing apocalypse, the flame of
European civilization would be extinguished forever.
The justification for this view hinges upon how the Nazis viewed their enemies as
people. While stereotyped portrayals of good and evil during times of war are a common
strategy of propaganda campaigns everywhere, the influence of racialist belief amounted
to a truly horrific perception of Germany's enemies (and the Russians in particular) as
sub-human monsters. In the context of looming defeat during the final years of the Third
Reich, this contributed to a belief that Germany faced an imminent apocalypse.
The idea of a German apocalypse originated with the pre-war notions of racial
struggle which predicted either the collapse of society due to the Jewish threat, or the
achievement of utopia through racial purification. Because the creation of utopia was a
noble aim which would require a full community effort, Hitler saw Antisemitism as a
potential unifying factor, citing as early evidence the solidarity it created between
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Protestants and Catholics in National Socialist ranks.281 His hope (which never
materialized) was for this solidarity to extend far beyond German borders – that
Antisemitism might act as a unifying force binding all Europeans together.282
For those who internalized the propagandists' claims of the war being a matter of
race survival, military defeat became a truly terrifying prospect. Moreover, the
catastrophic battle of Stalingrad and annihilation of the German Sixth Army8j283 delivered
a shattering blow to the people's confidence in the war. Historian Christian Goeschel
notes that after Stalingrad, suicide rates began to increase, caused in part by despair in the
face of defeat and fear of what would come afterwords.284 The war continued to progress
badly for Germany, and from Stalingrad onwards the escalating death tolls following
battles were kept from the public, though the sheer scale of the conflict meant losses
could not be kept entirely secret.285
Propagandists presented the advancing Russian army as a barbaric horde of
depraved murderers who fought to annihilate Germany and enslave Europe, as directed
by their Jewish-Bolshevik masters.286 Visual propaganda made use of real atrocities
committed by the Red Army as evidence to justified such fears. As one example, a
propaganda poster depicting the Katyn massacre (fig.19)287 features a pair of grinning
Soviet officers preparing to execute an Aryan-looking Polish officer, which served to
demonstrate the fate Europeans should expect from their Russian conquerors.288
281 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 829.
282 Hitler states: “We can live without the Jews, but they couldn't live without us. When the Europeans realize that, they'll all become
simultaneously aware of the solidarity that binds them together. The Jew prevents this solidarity. He owes his livelihood to the fact
that this solidarity does not exist.” Hitler, Hitler's Table Talk, 92.
283 August 23rd, 1942 – February 2nd, 1943.
284 Christian Goeschel, Suicide in Nazi Germany, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009), 136-141.
285 Herf, The Jewish Enemy, 232.
286 Ibid, 142-143.
287 The Katyn massacre was a mass execution of Polish officers, police, intellectuals, and professionals by Soviet agents in 1940. The
site of the massacre was discovered by the Germans after the invasion of Russia.
288 Herf, The Jewish Enemy, 207.
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Though the terror of defeat was partly a reflection of racialist beliefs, hard
evidence for war's destructive toll would have been painfully obvious to most of the
German public. From 1941 and 1942 onwards, the Allied bombing campaign – which had
the power to obliterate whole cities – became another source of fear that caused intense
anxiety for the German masses. By 1943, 300,000 civilians had been killed, with up to a
quarter of German homes destroyed and nearly five-million people forced to relocate.289
This destruction by air is the theme of a 1944 propaganda poster by artist Leest Storm,
titled Liberators290 (fig.20), which takes particular aim against the American enemy. The
composite form depicted in the work represents the various threatening attributes of
American culture as it looms over a European city, preparing to stomp the buildings
below into rubble. Racist allusions to African-American culture are made through the
inclusion of two muscular dark-skinned arms which hold a vinyl record in one hand
(signifying Jazz music) and a boxing glove on the other (an allusion to boxing legend Joe
Louis).291 In the same image, America is criticized for its racist tendencies, alluded to
through a Ku Klux Klan hood, lynching rope, and two caged Africans (an allusion to
slavery). Other attributes include the gangster's striped prisoner sleeve and Tommy-gun,
the Jewish star, the capitalist's bag of money, and the American air-force (represented by
wings and bombs).292
In the context of total war, depictions of the enemy that followed similar visual
conventions as were used to visualize the Jewish plot became more more frightening and
powerful than before. A 1944 illustration from the magazine Lustige Blätter (fig.21)
289 Goeschel, Suicide in Nazi Germany, 129.
290 This particular poster was intended for the German-occupied Netherlands as a criticism of the Allied bombing campaign and as a
warning against American invasion, suggesting the destruction of culture it would entail.
291 Joe Louis was an African American boxer who defeated Max Schmeling (a German hero figure for the Nazis) in 1938.
292 Backer, “Kultur-Terror: The Composite Monster in Nazi Visual Propaganada,” 81-83, 86-91.
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depicts a bleak and terrifying creature composed from aspects of Germany's major
military opponents. The torso displays the red star of communism and the arms bear the
flags of the United States and United Kingdom; the head – which has a vague
resemblance to stereotyped Jewish caricatures – is reserved for the Jewish Star. Gone are
the ridiculous or comical features typical of earlier Antisemitic images; the creature
appears frightening and determined, carrying massive weapons in its great ape-like hands,
as if the Jews who had been removed from the land were now returning, more monstrous
and powerful than before. This image reflects the mood of desperation that preceded
military defeat, emphasizing the need to fight as a matter of survival.
The mood of impending doom seems to have been intentionally intensified
through the statements of Nazi leaders, such as Hitler's prediction on January 30th, 1944,
that a victory for Russia would mean German annihilation.293 At a later date, Joseph
Goebbels called on civilians to sacrifice themselves to the war effort in greater numbers
in order to stave off this terrible fate:
The enemy does not want to take a province from us or push us back to more favourable strategic
borders; he wants to cut our very arteries by destroying our mines and factories, destroying our
national substance. If he succeeds, Germany will become a cemetery. Our people will starve and
perish, aside from the millions who will be deported to Siberia as slave labour. In such a situation,
any means is justified. We are in a state of national emergency; it is no time to ask what is normally
done!294
There is some historiographical debate as to why Nazi leaders should wish to
portray the enemy in this way as immensely powerful and terrifying. One view maintains
that Hitler had become detached from reality, believed the war was still winnable, and did
not head contrary advice from his generals. By contrast, historian Christian Goeschel
293 Herf, The Jewish Enemy, 239.
294Joseph Goebbels, “Widerstand um jeden Preis,” (Resistance at any Price), Das Reich, 22 April 1945, 1-2, accessed online.
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/goeb48.htm, (March 2, 2011), Page copyright © 1999 by Randall Bytwerk.
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attributes the propaganda campaign to the Nazi leaders' wish for the nation to die a heroic
death as a means of avoiding dishonour. According to Goeschel, Nazi leaders understood
that the war was unwinnable, but they continued in their efforts to radicalize the conflict
in order to strengthen the people's resolve, to continue resisting the enemy, and preserve
the nation's honour by fighting to the last. This was in order to avoid the disgrace of
negotiated peace, and to set a noble precedent of heroic self-sacrifice for future
generations to look back on.295
Regardless of political motivation, the goal of keeping the German people fighting
was largely successful, for despite growing disillusionment, there seems to have been a
strong consensus to support the regime until the very end.296 Hitler proclaimed that
Germany would never surrender, no matter the cost, including total destruction if need
be.297 During the last days of the war, hints of disobedience or expressions of a desire to
surrender were met with on-the-spot executions for soldiers and civilians alike.
Displaying the white flag entailed an automatic death sentence, and for civilians was to be
followed-up with a burning of the individual's home.298
Evidence for the feeling of impending apocalypse which hung over Germany in
these last days of the Reich is reflected in the mass of suicides that accompanied the final
collapse of the regime. Throughout the 1939-1945 period, suicide rates had closely
mirrored Germany's fortunes in war, and had been viewed by the State as as a cowardly
and dishonourable way out. However, with the looming catastrophe of defeat, suicide
295 Goeschel, Suicide in Nazi Germany, 146-148.
296 Gellately, Backing Hitler, 242.
297 His so called “Nero Order” called for scorched earth in the event of occupation, including the destruction of bridges,
infrastructure, military equipment, and the execution of prisoners. Luckily this order was never carried through. David Safford,
Endgame, 1945: The Missing Final Chapter of World War II, (New York; Boston; London: Black Bay Books/Little, Brown and
Company, 2009), xii.
298 Gellately, Backing Hitler, 234.
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became an increasingly common and acceptable response to fear and despair, and was
even presented by officials as a form of heroic refusal to outlive the regime. The cause
behind most suicides was probably not a last act of patriotism, but a terrified reaction to
the advancing Red Army, or a response to the general conditions of hardship that typified
life in the Third Reich.299
The vision of apocalypse which heralded the end of the Third Reich is a reflection
of the Nazi worldview, which was extreme in its beliefs in good and evil, and could not
cope with the prospect of defeat. Propaganda had inadvertently created the perfect trap for
the German people in which they were taught to believe in the war as a struggle for
survival, and that in reality they had no choice but to continue fighting against the
dreadful enemy. Death awaited the individual at the end of every road: if one fought the
enemy, then they would be killed in battle or captured and taken into slavery; if one
refused to fight or surrendered, then they would be executed by the secret police or sent to
a concentration camp; if one did nothing, then the Russians would eventually take power
and inflict unimaginable horrors on the survivors. Under such conditions, it is
understandable that suicide became such a common response.
Conclusion: the Nazi social view
Though Nazism created this environment of fear in which death became
preferable to life, it was not a fundamentally suicidal ideology. The Nazi social view
presented a range of ideals that the people were expected to aspire towards in their daily
lives, which also served to glorify the Third Reich. A sense of impending doom became a
299 Goeschel, Suicide in Nazi Germany, 154-165.
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feature of propaganda only after the tide of war had turned and become hopeless. Nazi
theorists had always presented the war as a black and white struggle for survival between
forces of good and evil, and in this respect the Nazis' racist perception of utopia was
darkly mirrored by their vision of apocalypse preceding defeat.
The fears and ideals communicated to the public through propaganda define the
Nazis' vision of society, and should be interpreted within the context of propaganda's
functional purpose as a controlling agent over the masses. One of the central objectives of
the Nazi propaganda campaign was to foster in the public a favourable and obedient
attitude towards the National Socialists, and to this end, the strategic promotion of
specific ideals was essential, for they established the models of behaviour ordinary people
were expected to emulate.
To what extent such ideals were believed by either propagandists or the public is a
matter of speculation, for in the environment of fear, paranoia, and intimidation fostered
by authorities, maintaining an appearance of support for Hitler's government became a
matter of survival. After the war, many people claimed to have secretly opposed the
Nazis, and that their support was in appearance only. Along similar lines, the objectives of
propagandists – the winning of the masses by any means necessary – made actual belief
in such ideas unnecessary. It did not matter what people believed, so long as they obeyed,
and in this way all of the Nazis' social ideals should be regarded as leading towards the
same goal: the empowerment of the Party.
From an ideological perspective, belief in the importance of power was the first
principle of National Socialism, which presented adherence to 'natural law' and survival
of the fittest as the one all-important truth governing reality. Conceivably, true belief in
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any principle beyond this law was unnecessary (though the appearance of belief might
have been an important asset). However, winning public support required a more noble
set of ideals, and in this way the 'new community', the noble warrior, and the rebirth of
the classical age could have served as an attractive facade behind which the brutal
machine of totalitarian government could operate more smoothly.
Collaboration, subjugation, and resistance in anti-Nazi literature
While the Nazi propaganda narrative was concerned with expressing the ideals
and fears people should draw inspiration from, anti-Nazi authors sought to explain what
real motivations led their countrymen to collaborate with or resist the Third Reich. Since
differing values influenced the perception of authors, the National Socialist struggle was
understood in a variety of different ways. Though anti-Nazi literature represents the
alternative views of authors as individuals rather than society as a whole, it does provide a
glimpse into the reasoning that led some Germans to oppose Hitler's regime.
In the previous two chapters, literary portrayals of the anti-Nazi worldview were
used to show how authors believed the chief characteristic of the Third Reich lay in the
imbalance of power it brought between the citizen and the state, and how Nazism existed
in the domain of thought and belief as a corruption of Germany's basic notions of good
and evil. The combination of these factors amounted to a vision of Nazism as an allencompassing and overpowering force of evil that confronted the individual on every
front. While this view demonstrates how authors used their perceptions of evil to describe
the environment of the Third Reich, it does not reveal their thoughts on the motives that
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led ordinary people to support, obey, or resist the Nazi regime.
Within anti-Nazi literature, the interplay of motivation and action governing
support for the state stems from a diversity of explanations, ranging from the naivety of
common folk to the ruthless ambition of individual conspirators, and from the fear-driven
hysteria of the masses to the honour-bound obedience of soldiers. Though literature also
presents a diversity of motives inspiring acts of resistance, there is a common emphasis
on the principled need need to uphold personal moral values that forces individuals into a
state of opposition. In this way, the individual's struggle against the state takes on the
form of an internal conflict between good and evil.
In depicting the perpetrators of Nazi crimes, anti-Nazi authors gave focus to a
broad array of subjects relating to the importance of social context in determining
behaviour. A common conclusion drawn from this focus maintained that the perpetrators
were predominantly ordinary in character, and that all of Germany shared in varying
degrees of guilt. Unlike the examples set by portrayals of Nazi leaders, the distinctions
between good and evil for these ordinary Germans is left ambiguous, as individuals
struggle with their own survival and sense of spiritual well-being in a brutal system
compromised by evil.
The rise of Nazism as a product of historical context
To begin, as the only work that examines the problem of Nazism from a
perspective which predates Hitler's acquisition of power, Claire Bergmann's300 1932
300 Not much is known about Clair Bergmann, as she was a new author at the time of the publication for this novel, and seems to have
disappeared during the Third Reich.
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novel, What Will Become of the Children?301 attributes the rise of National Socialism to
the the context of Germany's political, social, and economic turmoil. The focus of her
narrative is on the “Deutsch family,” a middle-class household that struggles to get by
amidst the hardship of late-Weimar Germany. The strangulation of society due to crushing
economic and political concerns is held responsible for the rise of extremist groups, most
notably the Nazis, who were themselves symptomatic of the people's despair and anger.
Bergmann also attributes the rise of violent extremism to the First World War and the
Revolution of 1918-1919, which marked the beginnings of Germany's tendency towards
brutality and civil conflict.302
This perception that Germany's political extremism originated in its unique
historical context is a common view shared by many historians who attribute the rise of
Nazism to the variety hardships that preceding Hitler's rise to power. The violence of the
First World War was perhaps the most notable precursor to Nazi extremism, which,
according to Hannah Arendt, survived in memory as a potent symbol of death and
dehumanization. The war also served as an emblem of classlessness and of reality
unrestrained by the facade of civility, which testified to a popular desire to evade the
trappings of society and “lose one's self” through “actions” that define identity.303 In
addition, Arendt attributes the growth in political activism and social turmoil in Germany
to its transition from a bourgeois-dominated class society to a society of masses, which
was not unique to Germany but was perhaps aggravated by the widespread desperation of
301 What Will Become of the Children tells the story of a middle-class German family who struggle to overcome the economic and
political hardships of life during the last years of the Weimar Republic.
302 While Bergmann describes the revolution as “relatively harmless,” it also marks the beginning of the time when“the Germans
began to tear at their own flesh.” Claire Bergmann, What Will Become of the Children?: A Novel of a German Family in the
Twilight of Weimar Berlin, (Original title: Was Wird aus deinen kindern, Pitt?), first published in Berlin, 1932, trans. Richard
Bodek, (Rochester, NY: Camden House, 2010), 21.
303 By this, Arendt argues that political extremism was less a reflection of belief and more a matter of identity. Arendt, Origins of
Totalitarianism, 435-436, 439, 458.
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its populace.304 In this vein, historian Martin Broszat contends that the unreliability of the
Weimar Republic, which was brought on by the collapse of authoritarian tradition at the
end of the First World War, created a longing for strong leadership that factored into the
motives of Germans who supported Hitler.305 Finally, the financial strain caused by the
1929 economic crash should not be overlooked as an important element that preceded
Hitler's rule.306 According to Robert Gellately, the combination of these conditions
contributed to the rising popularity of extreme political parties which grew in their degree
of violence as the sense of crisis in Germany escalated.307
In addition to her focus on Germany's socioeconomic context, Clair Bergmann
identifies the naive and ignorant qualities of Nazi supporters as a secondary cause leading
to the rise in political extremism. This is explained through the character of Helmut
Deutsch, the most childish and easily frustrated member of the family. Though he joins a
Nazi youth gang and becomes involved with brutal street violence, Helmut's behaviour is
attributed to his low education and youthful sense of rebellion against society's
imperfections. He is led astray through the influence of his peers to the extent that he
cannot think for himself, and is described as one who “doesn't want to be anything but a
herd animal.”308 His stunted intellect is attributed to the broken social system of Weimar
Germany, which failed to instill in him the proper values of a healthy mind. In this way,
the author uses the youth and innocence of Helmut to portray the Nazis as victims of their
304 According to Arendt, the chief characteristic of the “mass man” was his isolation and lack of normal social relationships. The mass
society developed as a result of the breakdown of the class system and corresponding growth in desire for political organization,
which was generally prevented due to the sheer size of the uncohesive mass. Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 342, 414-421.
305 Broszat, The Hitler State, 193.
306 Gellately, Backing Hitler, 10-11.
307 The main rivals by the early 1930s were the National Socialists and Marxist factions. Either group competed politically in
elections and through propaganda, and engaged in violent street brawls. While the depression won some support for the Marxists
amongst working-class Germans, it was also accompanied by rising fear of communism and desire for security, sentiments which
favoured the Nazis. Gellately, Backing Hitler, 11-12, 18, 36.
308 Bergmann, What Will Become of the Children?, 20, 44-45.
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own leaders, and that like Helmut, the majority of Nazi supporters were were simply too
ignorant and angry to distinguish truth from lies.
Other authors echo this perception of Nazi supporters being essentially innocent
fools manipulated by their leaders into committing or abiding heinous crimes. For
example, the character of Käthe Severin in Lion Feuchtwanger's 1943 novel, Double,
Double, Toil and Trouble, is used to illustrate the naivety of ordinary people during the
Nazis' rise to power, as she is easily misled and responds to stories of atrocity with
genuine disbelief. Feuchtwanger suggests this behaviour was typical of the masses at
large, whose support for the Nazis would only be shaken with great reluctance, despite
growing awareness of their atrocities. He writes:
Few people in Germany at that time knew about these things, although they were taking place all
around them, often in their immediate neighbourhood. Only those affected knew about them, only
the opponents of the Party, but many millions of Germans suspected nothing, and if one told them
they were incredulous.309
The reluctance of the public to acknowledge the 'evil' of National Socialism is
corroborated by Victor Klemperor's account of life in the Third Reich, where he makes
note of a young friend who did not believe in the sincerity of the Nazis' Antisemitic
claims, stating, “The fuss and bother about the Jews is only there for propaganda
purposes. You wait, when Hitler is at the helm he'll be far too busy to insult the Jews...”310
While such disbelief and related claims to ignorance might have seemed plausible before
1933 (as reflected in Bergmann's 1932 novel), the truth of Nazi brutality would have been
all but impossible to deny following Hitler's acquisition of power.311
Claire Bergmann's novel also attributes political extremism to the folly of racial
309 Feuchtwanger, Double, Double, Toil and Trouble, 270.
310 Klemperer, The Language of the Third Reich, 42.
311 This was largely due to the Nazis' widespread publication of stories of harsh justice, persecution of 'outsiders', and declarations of
ill-intent towards Jews and Slavs spread through the media (in addition to the word-of-mouth rumours of secret killings and the
disturbing regularity of 'disappearances'). Gellately, Backing Hitler, 5-6, 19, 78-80.
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thinking and adherence to divisive nationalism, as explained to Max Deutsch by his elder
brother, Peter:
There's lots of fertile land, enough for everybody to grow their own bread. But people and races
are so obsessed with each other and with their own territory that they don't care about anyone else.
Each group thinks that it's better than the other, and then is afraid of mixing, even though this
usually refreshes a race. And besides, we're all human beings. Do you understand Max, human
beings, who in their efforts at furthering their own civilizations, are just trying to keep up with each
other, and when there's no war, exchange their ideas, music, and so on? But war builds walls
between them still higher, and then they just start to hate each other.312
The Nazis do not appear uniquely evil in this context, merely one of several competing
extremist groups, all of whom were mistaken in their sense of righteousness and desire
for violent revolution.313
As a solution to Germany's socioeconomic problems, Bergmann argues that
despite the turmoil and uncertainty, ordinary people were still decent human beings
whose overwhelming desire was to live simple lives in peaceful harmony with nature and
each other. Elsa Deutsch, the middle-child of three sisters in the family, expresses this
wish poetically:
A fresh smell of hay, or a strong ruffling sea breeze! Instead of smoke and dust in the air, and a
cigarette to calm you down [...] to run once more in open fields, to really be tied to the earth. [...]
Imagine, just for a minute, no machines, not having to figure out whether there's enough money to
get through the month. To just lie on your back and look at the sky. Just once, to lose yourself and
then find yourself again! Then, a real, deep peace in the land. Nobody staring at the other anymore
thinking, 'And what party are you with?'314
Though contemporary hardships obstructed this dream, Bergmann's novel presents the
triumph of goodness as an inevitability in the future of German society.
312 Bergmann, What Will Become of the Children?, 19.
313 This is made clear by Max Deutsch, the elder brother to Helmut, who tries to expose the young man to the folly of his black and
white worldview: “Neither side is right. [...] Where's it going to get us if we call each other murderers and dogs? Or if each ignores
the exhausting work that the other does. Long ago we were known as a chivalrous people. Now our respect for our opponents has
sunk as low as our cultural level.” Bergmann, What Will Become of the Children?, 50.
314 Ibid, 44.
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Nature, and the inherent differences of 'German character'
While other anti-Nazi authors identify historical context as one of the contributing
factors leading to the rise of Nazism, none emphasize its significance to the same degree
as Claire Bergmann. For instance, in Ernst Jünger's 1943 novel, On Marble Cliffs, he
alludes to the importance of the First World War as a precedent for the brutality of the
Third Reich, but it is only one element contributing to the broad scope of the surrounding
social context.315 To explain the underlying cause, Jünger focuses on the importance of
nature in determining the character of Hitler's supporters.
As a text written within the Third Reich, Jünger's novel adopts the relatively thin
veil of a historical fantasy in order to cast covert criticism against Hitler's rule.
Accordingly, Hitler is represented through the character of a tyrant called the Chief
Ranger, while his supporters (synonymous with the Nazis) are called the Mauretanians,
and Germany (or perhaps Europe) is represented by a fictional land called the Marina.
The first element which allows to Chief Ranger to seize power is the weakening
effect of fear upon society, as Jünger writes:
At first one heard only rumours like the first obscure heralds of a pest raging in distant harbours.
Then reports spread from mouth to mouth of infringements of the law and of acts of violence in the
neighbourhood, and finally such incidents occurred publicly and with no attempt at concealment. A
cloud of fear preceded the Chief Ranger like the mountain mist that presages the storm. Fear
enveloped him, and I am convinced that therein far more than his own person, lay his power. Only
when things had begun to totter from their inherent weakness could he exercise his might; but
when that moment came his forests were well placed for assault against the land.316
This allusion to Hitler's rise is complimented by a critique of society's weak response; so
easily surrendering its freedom and allowing itself to be intimidated (a fact for which the
315 The First World War is alluded to through references to a great military catastrophe in recent living memory that fundamentally
altered society: “[...] the war on the borders of Alt Plana, waged as if against the infidel, had had a more profound effect, ravaging
like a frost that splits a tree to the core, but whose effect is first apparent only years later. That was how life developed by the
Marina. It was the old life, and yet something had changed in it.” Jünger, On Marble Cliffs, 36.
316 Ibid, 36-37.
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narrator accepts his share of guilt).317 The tyrant's supporters (the Mauretanians) are
similarly defined by their innate affinity for terror and chaos, as Jünger makes clear:
They say that if one falls headlong into an abyss one sees things in the minutest detail as though
through a crystal-clear lens. This – without the fear – was the vision that one acquired in the air of
Mauretania, in an atmosphere which was poisoned through and through. At the very moment when
terror reigned, coolness of thought and spiritual detachment increased. In the face of catastrophe
good-humour was everywhere, and they would jest at it like the keeper of a gaming-table at the
losses of his clients.318
It is important to note that Jünger's portrayal of the tyrant and his supporters gives
emphasis to the unique differences that distinguish the conquerors from ordinary people,
namely their aura of primitive power, comfort in the face of fear, and eagerness to rule by
force. This lends them such a terrifying reputation that society collapses rather than face
their wrath. As a social commentary, this view suggests that the Nazis were
fundamentally different from the rest of humanity due to the violence of their inherently
primitive character.
Despite this view, the author is also careful to show that the tyrant's supporters
remain capable of free choice, and of resistance against evil. The character of a
Mauretanian adventurer named Braquemart is used to illustrate this point, as he chooses
to rebel against the Chief Ranger rather than endure his rule. This element likely alludes
to the feelings of resentment against the Nazi Party that were prominent among
conservatives of the professional military class before and during Hitler's rule.319
Braquemart appears similar to the Nazis in that he believes in the existence of a racial
imbalance between “masters and slaves,” and according to the text, “like all who hunger
after power and mastery, he was led astray by his wild dreams into the realm of
317 Ibid, 35, 42.
318 Ibid, 34-35.
319 The Valkyrie conspirators that attempted to murder Hitler is perhaps the most noteworthy example of this.
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Utopias.”320 Despite these traits, he is driven to rebel against his own kind due to a
fundamental difference in worldview:
It may seem noteworthy that in this affair Braquemart wished to confront the Ranger, although
there was much in common in their ways of thought and action. But it is an error which often runs
through our thought that we deduce identity of goals from identity of methods, and conclude that
the aims are the same. Yet there was a difference to this degree, that the Ranger had in mind to
people of the Marina with wild beasts, while Braquemart looked on it as land to be settled with
slaves and their overlords. At bottom the question revolved round one of the internal conflicts
between Mauretanians which it is not practicable to describe here. It is sufficient to indicate that
between full-blown nihilism and unbridled anarchy there is a profound difference. Whether the
abodes of men shall become a desert of primeval forest depends upon the outcome of this
struggle.321
This excerpt alludes to the subtleties of belief that could separate the supporters of
National Socialism from their opponents, despite similarities in worldview. In this way,
Ernst Jünger offers a unique perspective on the Third Reich, for he was a celebrated war
hero whose nationalism and perceptions of natural law overlapped in many ways with
Nazi ideology, yet he remained strongly opposed to Hitler's rule.322 According to the
views communicated through On Marble Cliffs, the reason for this opposition may have
resided in the authors' distaste for the lawlessness and savagery adopted by Hitler and his
unruly supporters.
In spite of his stance on the importance of opposition, Ernst Jünger treats the
subject of resistance with considerable ambiguity. This fact might be attributed to the
author's belief in the overwhelming power of nature, which rendered all human activity
small by comparison, yet did not make all acts of resistance entirely without meaning. In
some cases, the overwhelming majesty of the universe appears as a source of comfort to
the protagonists, who regard their own problems as petty in comparison to its sublime
320 Ibid, 80-83.
321 Jünger, On Marble Cliffs, 82.
322 As a public figure, Jünger was celebrated by the Nazis as one of the few great modern authors, whose earlier work titled Storm of
Steel presented a view of war that accorded to Nazi perceptions (as opposed to Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western
Front). Jünger briefly spent time as an admired supporter of Hitler's regime, though he evidently grew disillusioned with the Third
Reich shortly after it had been established. Nikolaus Wachsmann, “Marching under the Swastika? Ernst Jünger and National
Socialism, 1918-33,” Journal of Contemporary History , vol. 33, no. 4 (Oct., 1998), 573-575.
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power, as Jünger writes:
[...] we looked long upon the land and sought out some sign of salvation in every ridge and
fold. Then the scales seemed to fall from our eyes, and we caught something of its imperishable
splendour, which lived on like an image in poetry. It was with joy that we felt the certainty come
over us that destruction finds no place in the elements, and that its seeming power moves on the
surface of life like a swirling ghostly mist which cannot withstand the sun.323
In light of nature's invulnerability to evil, the narrator's first response to tyranny is to
retreat from the world into naturalist studies as a form of inner spiritual release.
Alternatively, Jünger presents violent opposition against tyranny as a necessary
struggle, but only when the proper time to strike had arrived. He writes:
Now battle had to be joined, and therefore men were needed to restore a new order, and new
theologians as well, to whom the evil was manifest from its outward phenomena down to its more
subtle roots; then the time would come for the first stroke of the consecrated sword, piercing the
darkness like a lightning flash.324
The “new theologians” Jünger refers to are likely an allusion to men like himself who
intimately understood the Nazi worldview, and therefore possessed the knowledge that
would be necessary for its undoing.
While a great battle is waged against the tyrant, such violent opposition proves
fruitless. Eventually, just as the tyrant stands at the edge of his ultimate victory, he is
defeated by the excesses of his reign as elements of nature rise up and crush his power.
This final conclusion suggests that evil was but a small part of reality's collective whole,
and that tyranny was symptomatic towards a cosmic imbalance that would correct itself
naturally through time, as Jünger writes: “[...] the time was ripe for terror. In this respect
man-made order is like the universe – from time to time it must plunge into the flames to
be born anew.”325 In this way, the rise of tyrannical evil is presented as a natural part of
civilization's ongoing life-cycle, and by extension, all human behaviour could be regarded
323 Jünger, On Marble Cliffs, 63-64.
324 Ibid, 84.
325 Ibid, 54.
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as reflection of natural law.
An alternative perspective on the influence of nature upon human behaviour is
provided by Thomas Mann,326 who emphasizes the importance of 'German character' as an
innate quality that contributed to the rise of Nazism, as depicted in his 1947 novel, Dr.
Faustus.327 In this work, a reoccurring element of the social commentary is directed
towards the people's fatalistic character and their desire for emotional release through
irrational behaviour. According to the narrator, both these elements were the particular
characteristics of Germans, which the Nazis exploited by making support for National
Socialism an irresistible urge. Mann writes:
Yes, we are an utterly different people; we deny and reject the foregone conclusions; we are a
people of mightily tragic soul, and our love belongs to fate – any fate, if only it be one, even
destruction kindling heaven with the crimson flames of death of the Gods! [...] For liars and
lickspittles mixed us a poison drought and took away our senses. We drank – for we Germans
perennially yearn for intoxication – and under its spell, through years of deluded high living, we
committed a superfluity of shameful deeds, which must now be paid for. 328
Thus, despite the responsibility of the National Socialists in leading the people to disaster,
the people were themselves responsible for the rise of Nazism and shared directly in the
'German guilt' that resulted from their collective crimes against humanity, as Mann writes:
[...] is it mere hypochondria to say to oneself that everything German, even the German mind and
spirit, German thought, the German Word, is involved in this scandalous exposure and made
subject to some distrust?329
In light of such guilt, Mann argues that the Germans deserved to be punished through
326 Thomas Mann (1875-1955) was a German novelist and social critic of enormous success and fame who frequently drew on
Germany's literary, theological, and philosophical traditions in his works. After 1933, Thomas Mann went into exile, first to
Switzerland and then to the United States, where he became leading proponent of 'exile literature' which opposed Hitler's regime.
Unlike the experiences of many other exiles, Mann enjoyed considerable fame upon his arrival on foreign soil. Kurt S. Maier, “A
Fellowship in German Literature: Thomas Mann, Agnes Meyer, and Archibald MacLeish,” The Quarterly Journal of the Library
of Congress , vol. 36, no. 4 (Fall 1979), 385-386.
327 Begun during the Second World War but not completed until 1947, Dr. Faustus is a novel which tells the story of a fictional
German composer of incredible talent who strives for greatness but contracts syphilis and goes insane. The story takes inspiration
from the story of Faust, a German legend in which a brilliant scholar makes a pact with the Devil for unlimited knowledge and
worldly pleasures in exchange for his soul. It is narrated through the recollections of a writer who lives in Germany during the
Third Reich.
328Thomas Mann, Doctor Faustus: The Life of the German Composer Adrian Leverkühn as told by a Friend, (New York: Alfred A.
Knopf, 1948), 174-175.
329 Ibid, 481.
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defeat and the destruction of their cities as the necessary price to be paid for evil.330
The notion of unique German difference, as either more primitive or more
susceptible to delusion, feeds into the historiographical debate on Nazism, and the precise
nature of guilt. According to the ideas presented in the literary works of Thomas Mann
and Ernst Jünger, the innate qualities of the German people was a crucial factor
contributing to the rise of Nazism, as well as the horrors that followed. This view relates
to a common perception that is shared by some historians of the Holocaust, including
Daniel Goldhagen in his 1997 study of a mobile killing unit on the Eastern Front, titled
Hitler's Willing Executioners. Goldhagen's controversial argument maintains that the
majority of Holocaust perpetrators had little or no moral objection to killing the Jews, that
they were self-motivated by their belief in “demonological Antisemitism,” which resulted
from an anthropological difference, characteristic of the Germans during that era.
Goldhagen also challenges and rejects a number of other historiographical explanations,
claiming they all fail because they assume the perpetrators did not want to commit their
crimes.331
While it is without doubt that Antisemitism did play an important role in events,
many modern historians argue that it is short-sighted to focus on a single factor as the
exclusive cause for the Holocaust. Since so many people were involved with Nazi warcrimes, it has been argued that they cannot be explained through the sheer malevolence or
insanity of perpetrators. Historian Tilman Allert summarizes this view succinctly:
The success of National Socialism cannot be reduced to a pathological personality type or to some
330 This conclusion was likely influenced by the fact Mann's novel was completed after the end of the Second World War.
331 Some of these rejected theories include external compulsion (being coerced into following orders through fear), mass ignorance or
mesmerism (perpetrators as blind followers), intense social/psychological pressure to conform (peer pressure), and the role of
bureaucracy, or functionality of the Nazi state, in determining the fate of the Jews (which the individual perpetrator could not
fathom in its entirety). Goldhagen, Hitler's Willing Executioners, 11-14, 28, 392.
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typically German mentality; rather it reflects a will to ignorance, a desire to narrow one's
perspective to the point of moral blindness.332
Moreover, Goldhagen has been criticized for excluding contrary evidence in his study that
did not agree with his theory, and that his heavy emphasis on German guilt released other
parties from their share of responsibility. Thus, it can be argued that blaming the
Holocaust on a unique quality of the German people will invariably exclude many other
factors, leading to a false or incomplete conclusion.333
Fear and intimidation
A more common explanation for why the masses collaborated with the Nazis
relates to the terroristic policies of the Nazi government, and the problem of fear as the
governing element behind social control in the Third Reich. While this view is shared by
many authors, and appears to some degree in most of the literary works used in this study,
two novels that stand out from the others are Anna Seghers'334 The Seventh Cross,335 and
Hans Falalda's Every Man Dies Alone.
In The Seventh Cross, the narrative follows an escape attempt by seven
concentration camp prisoners, and the response it elicits from the people of the
surrounding countryside. The community of of Liebau, which plays host to the fictional
concentration camp Westhofen, serves as a microcosm of the Third Reich in which fear of
332 Allert, The Hitler Salute, 90-91.
333Groth, “Demonizing the Germans: Goldhagen and Gellately on Nazism,” 118-158; Browning, “Ordinary Men or Ordinary
Germans,” 62-64; Ian Kershaw, The Nazi Dictatorship: Problems and Perspectives of Interpretation, 3rd edition, (New York:
Edward Arnold, 1993), 14; Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 491.
334 Anna Seghers (1900-1983) was of Jewish descent, was married to a known communist, and had been critical of the Nazi Party
before their assumption of power, marking her fit for persecution after 1933. After a brief period of imprisonment, she fled into
exile (first to France, and then Mexico) where she continued to voice her opposition to the Third Reich through literature.
335 First published in 1942, The Seventh Cross tells the story of a group of concentration camp escapees who are one-by-one hunted
down by police and an unsympathetic public and returned to prison for further torture and eventual execution. The narrative
focuses on George Heisler (an escapee) and his comrade Franz Marnet (a fellow member of a leftist resistance group) as the two
work towards George's eventual escape.
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persecution dominates society. While the townsfolk of Liebau are initially repulsed by the
concentration camp for its gruesome reputation as place of death and torture, they learn to
accept its presence after being threatened with imprisonment, and eventually become selfgoverning in the maintenance of their subservience.336 In this way, the prison camp
becomes the perfect symbol for Nazi authority, representing the ultimate weapon for
crushing opposition and controlling the public. The culture of fear which emerges as a
result of persecution maintains a carefully constructed appearance of uniform obedience,
in which any deviation is either reported to authorities or shunned.
A similar perspective is found in Every Man Dies Alone, though the focus of this
novel is on the role played by suspicion in helping the Nazis retain power. According to
Fallada's depiction of Berlin during the Second World War, the people's fear of
persecution by the state and mistrust of strangers gives rise to an atmosphere of extreme
suspicion in which opponents to the regime are made to feel entirely alone. Suspicion
forces resistance operatives into hiding, and support from the public remains virtually
non-existent as the terrified masses guard against anything which might compromise their
safety. Maintaining an appearance of obedience was necessary to ward off Nazi agents,
who, like the masses, viewed everyone as a potential traitor. To illustrate this point,
Fallada's novel adopts the perspective of a Gestapo agent named Escherich, who
continually hunts for evidence of anti-Nazi activity:
There was a bad smell wherever you stuck your nose. Inspector Escherich was firmly convinced
that he would find a knot of secrecy and deceit in well-nigh every German home. Almost no one
had a clean conscience – of course with the exception of Party members.337
The use of fear and intimidation as a means for social control in The Seventh
336 Anna Seghers, The Seventh Cross, trans. James A. Galston, (Boston: Little Brown and Co., 1942), 70.
337 Fallada, Every Man Dies Alone, 263.
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Cross and Every Man Dies Alone reflects an important element of everyday reality
governing social behaviour in the Third Reich. The terroristic side of Hitler's rule has
already been described in relation to the murderous court system, the widespread
persecution of opposition, and systematic use of police brutality, all of which contributed
to the state's frightening reputation. Germany's worsening position in the the Second
World War only added to the brutality of Nazi rule, due in part to Hitler's conviction that
any person who did not commit fully to the national effort should be punished as a traitor
to the people, as he states:
If you wish to wage war successfully or to lead a people successfully through a difficult period of
its history, you must have no doubts whatever on one point – namely, any individual who in such
times tries, either actively or passively, to exclude himself from the activities of the community,
must be destroyed.338
Additionally, opportunistic denunciations by the public, the arbitrary rule of police
justice, and the practice of assigning guilt through association meant nobody could be
sure of their safety.339
As a form of social control, the impact of persecutions extended far beyond the
case of those directly effected. Rather than conceal the violence they committed against
their own citizens, the Nazis regularly advertised stories about the 'enemies' they had
captured and executed. For this reason, it should be understood that fear of the state was
an intentional social construction spread through stories in the press, radio broadcasts, and
by word of mouth. However, fear should not be seen as the only factor motivating the
obedience of Germans. There was a considerable amount of willing support for Hitler's
government among the masses, not only for the economic and political reforms he
offered, but also for the 'evil practices' associated with his repression of opposition. Even
338 Hitler, (June 7, 1942), Hitler's Table Talk, 392.
339 Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 428, 512, 555-559.
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as the severity of Nazi persecutions increased, Party membership continued to expand.340
Not all historians view the growth in support for Nazism as a reflection of genuine
approval. For instance, Hannah Arendt argues that this support was partly a response to
fear, as many people who joined the Nazi Party did so with the hope of avoiding
persecution.341 Since the mercilessness of the Nazi court system made suspicion of guilt a
deadly prospect, maintaining the proper appearance of obedience and loyalty was vital to
one's survival, though it also posed an obstacle to the organization of resistance.
This difficulty is reflected through the struggles faced by the protagonists of Anna
Seghers' novel, George Heisler and Franz Marnet. As an escaped fugitive on the run from
Nazi agents, George Heisler is unable to rely on help from ordinary people due to their
fear and mistrust of strangers. Of this difficulty, he explains: “The bad one's will betray
me, and the good one's are hiding. They hid themselves entirely too well.”342 A similar set
of challenges is faced by Franz Marnet, a socialist resistance operative who tries to bring
aid to the escapees, but is unable to enlist any help from the public without revealing his
anti-Nazi sentiment. One of his co-conspirators (a working-class man named Fiedler)
explains how fear added to the problem of gathering anti-Nazi supporters:
If things go wrong, the best that can happen is six or eight years in the CC [concentration camp];
the worst – off comes the head!' No wonder, then, that one gets for an answer: 'What you want of
me, Fiedler, isn't worth risking my neck for.343
The perception of mass conformity communicated through the works of Fallada
and Seghers suggest that the facade of support for Hitler's regime, created in response to
fear, had the critical effect of undermining resistance, which proved instrumental to the
340 Additionally, with regards to Hitler's rule through fear, it is important to note the extreme differences between the Germany of
1933 with that of 1945, for in the early phases of Hitler's rule, terroristic policies were not as necessary for the maintenance of
order. Gellately, Backing Hitler, 15, 256-260.
341 Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 454.
342 Anna Seghers, The Seventh Cross, 274.
343 Ibid, 279.
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Nazis' dominion over German society. In support of this view, historian Tilman Allert's
study of the 'Hitler salute' suggests that much of the Nazi's success hinged on their ability
to insert ideology into all facets of German life, thereby politicizing even mundane affairs
such as a casual greeting between associates. Since failure to perform the 'German
greeting' could result in fines or imprisonment, the rigidly enforced Hitler salute had the
effect of fostering an inflated appearance of the public's enthusiasm for the Nazi Party.
For the masses, these small but cumulatively significant demonstrations of compliance
had the important effect of reinforcing a perception that all of society was complicit with
the regime, and served to condition individuals to demonstrate obedience.344
Denunciation, and the complicity of the masses with Nazism
Both The Seventh Cross and Every Man Dies Alone demonstrate a broad focus on
society under totalitarian rule, and portray the masses as victim to forces beyond their
control. A contrasting perspective is provided by Erika Mitterer, who's novel, The Prince
of Darkness, also takes into account the effect of fear on society, but places a considerable
burden of guilt on ordinary people. Specifically, Mitterer focuses on the subject of
denunciation, and casts critical judgement against the people for their complicit role in
spreading terror by procuring victims for the authorities to persecute.
Since The Prince of Darkness was written within the Nazi state and could not
make its political criticisms overt, the setting of a medieval German city was adopted in
order to communicate the author's anti-Nazi views. The central conflict revolves around a
344 Allert, The Hitler Salute, 2-7, 11-15, 30-32, 53, 60-61, 87; John W. Meaney, “Propaganda as Psychical Coercion,” The Review of
Politics, vol. 13, no. 1 (Cambridge University Press for the University of Notre Dame du lac on behalf of Review of Politics, Jan.,
1951), 82.
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cruel and arbitrary Inquisitor who persecutes the citizenry with absolute authority
following the outbreak of a plague. This is under the pretext of rooting out satanic evil,
the supposed cause behind all of the community's suffering. At first only marginal women
are targeted by the Inquisitor – the poor, the insane, and the 'immoral' – but soon the
people are called upon to expose their friends, neighbours, and family, if suspected of any
wrongdoing. In the ensuing chaos, a majority of the community complies with this order
and the Inquisitor's dungeon soon fills with the condemned.
As a coded criticism of the Third Reich, the subject of denouncement explores the
motives behind acts of collaboration during the author's contemporary environment, and
serves as a condemnation of the masses for their complicit role in state persecutions.
While some cases relate to authentic ideological motives, Mitterer identifies a variety of
other causes, including greed, idle curiosity, cruelty, revenge, and lust for power, and
questions the degree to which fear actually drove the masses to collaborate, as she writes:
Was it really their conscience, their fear of being considered accomplices for concealing evil deeds
and thoughts? Or was it the curiosity to see, close to the man who had taken up the fight against
the devil? Or was it lust for something gruesome, or simply the urge to get away for an hour or so
from everyday life – the whining of the hungry children, the brutality of a drunken husband –
and to taste what it was like to have power oneself, to interfere in the course of fate, which until
now one had only suffered in grim patience.345
A similar view of collaboration is echoed by historian Robert Gellately, who notes
that non-ideological denunciations carried out as acts of revenge or for the sake of
personal gain were a widespread phenomenon during the Third Reich, a fact which
demonstrated the ability of individuals to adapt the brutality of the Nazi regime to their
own selfish needs.346 Other anti-Nazi authors also share this view, including the
noteworthy example of Lion Feuchtwanger's The Oppermanns, wherein acts of
345 Mitterer, The Prince of Darkness, 586-587.
346 Gellately, Backing Hitler, 137-140.
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denunciation are largely attributed to the opportunism of the masses, as he writes:
“Anyone who belonged to the party in power could have his competitor spirited away to a
concentration camp.”347 Historian and cultural theorist, Theodor Adorno, offers a more
theoretical explanation, arguing that denunciations resulted from the facet of fascist
ideology that mimics religion, in that it holds great value for members of society who
embrace the chosen worldview and great hostility against those who remain outside of it,
resulting in a form of “malicious egalitarianism” that attacks all perceived differences.348
Hannah Arendt provides an alternative view of collaboration by focusing on the
unusual relationship between moral belief and political action brought about by Nazi rule,
as she states: “Evil in the Third Reich had lost the quality by which most people
recognized it – the quality of temptation.”349 Instead, Arendt attributes the primary source
of 'temptation' in Nazi Germany to the people's underlying desire to be good, to not
tolerate the authority of killers or abide the victimization of their friends and neighbours,
and to not become accomplices to Nazi crimes. However, Arendt states that the people
resisted the temptation to be good, and took part in acts that violated their sense of moral
decency. Arendt also stresses that reluctance did not undermine the significance of crimes
or the guilt of perpetrators; rather, it suggests that a new understanding of human
behaviour was needed to comprehend the true nature of evil.
This aspect of reluctance is explored further by historian of philosophy, Susan
Neiman, who views the lack of true malevolence on the part of Nazi collaborators as an
essential element to understanding why the masses became complicit. To her view, one of
347 Feuchtwanger, The Oppermanns. 344.
348 Theodor W. Adorno, “Freudian Theory and the Pattern of Fascist Propaganda,” The Culture Industry: Selected Essays on Mass
Culture, ed. J.M. Bernstein, (London; New York: Routledge, 2001), 144-146.
349 Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem, 150.
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the most remarkable achievements of the Nazi regime was its ability to override the moral
objections of the masses in order to procure denunciations. While the specific causes
behind such acts remain a subject of controversy, Neiman argues that its widespread
existence reveals the impotence of intention, for the German people as a whole loathed
the Nazis, yet seemed completely unable to disobey them. In other words, what motivated
the masses is of secondary significance to the fact many otherwise 'good' people chose to
collaborate with the authorities in ways that violated their personal sense of morality,
despite feeling averse to Hitler's regime. As an extension of Arendt's view, Neiman's
explanation for why this occurred finds fault with the common misconception that evil
actions were necessarily the result of evil motives. This misconception allowed many
ordinary people to maintain their sense of moral decency even while collaborating in
harmful ways against the innocent.350
The irrationality of the masses
The apparent irrationality of this contradiction between intention and action relates
to a key element of Erika Mitterer's novel that is used to tie all causes for collaboration
together. Though The Prince of Darkness touches on many subjects, the prejudice,
superstition, hysteria, and mob mentality of the masses leads them towards a state of
irrational mass-psychosis that serves to empower evil. As an anti-Nazi commentary, this
idea communicates the authors' opinion that the people were largely responsible for
Hitler's reign due to their inability to think or act rationally as a society.
In The Prince of Darkness, the collective will of the people is depicted as
350 Neiman, Evil in Modern Thought, 274-275.
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dangerously impulsive and destructive, even before hardship had befallen the community.
Once riled by fear and anger, the people become particularly susceptible to manipulation
as they seek to find the cause behind their suffering in order that it should not seem
meaningless. Mitterer writes:
In the consciousness of the masses, the sequence of events is sometimes forgotten. History
arranges itself according to likelihood at the cost of fact, thus creating a plausible rumour out of
impossible suppositions. [...] When man experiences evil, he wants at least to be able to hate the
source; then he finds it easier to bear.351
Though the suffering brought to the people through an outbreak of plague is caused by a
poor, sick, orphan girl, the people blame the disease on the immorality of sinners and the
scheming of Satan worshippers because it agrees with their preexisting assumptions.
As an allusion to the Third Reich, Mitterer's observations find parallel faults with
those in her contemporary society who blamed such 'enemies' as the Jews or the
communists for all of Germany's problems. Like the irrational fear of Satan, belief in such
evil relied on established prejudices rather than evidential proof, and the resulting effect
of widespread persecution and empowerment of harsh authorities were the same.
Moreover, that tyranny emerges as a result of mass hysteria and social disaster likely
alludes to Hitler's practice of capitalizing on moments of crisis to lay additional blame on
his chosen enemies, thereby reinforcing his grip on power.352
Criticism in The Prince of Darkness also applies to the more rational elements of
society who collaborate selfishly out of fear, or submit before authorities because they
cannot bear the burden of responsibility associated with free choice. Mitterer writes:
351 Mitterer, The Prince of Darkness, 183-184.
352 One example of this is the burning of the Reichstag buildings on February 27th, 1933, which was interpreted by Nazi officials as
the signal for a communist attack, and as consequence was followed by widespread purges against leftist political opponents and
the suspension of individual civil liberties. The official interpretation of the fire's cause was widely believed by the public in light
of their pre-existing anti-communist fears and the known rivalry between the Nazis and Marxists. Broszat, The Hitler State, 70-71;
H. Mommsen, “The Reichstag Fire and its Political Consequences,” Aspects of the Third Reich, ed. H. W. Koch, (Houndmills
(U.K.) and London: MacMillan Publishers, 1985), 63-67, 72-73.
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[...] the thoughtful man saw the masses of the semi-determined, the semi-enthusiasts, the tepidly
loving, who did not want to take their left hand from the Cross as they stretched out the right for
profit. And perhaps they longed for nothing so glowingly in the semi-extinguished craters of their
hearts as that at last someone strong enough to force them to an either-or and to decide for them so
that they might follow him in the comforting blindness that suited them better than the restless
lightning, the sudden flashing rays.353
Mitterer's conclusion suggests that, while the authorities remain directly responsible for
committing atrocities, the people were also complicit for their role in bringing the system
into place, for procuring victims through acts of denunciation, and for submitting too
eagerly before the will of those in power in order to avoid any burden of responsibility.
An alternative perspective on the irrationality of the masses is provided by Lion
Feuchtwanger, in his 1943 novel, Double, Double, Toil and Trouble. Here, the emotional
appeal of Nazism is likened to a hypnotic force. In this work, the masses appear driven by
their desire to submit before Hitler's authority and abandon their individuality in favour of
the group identity. This is made clear through the observations of Feuchtwanger's lead
protagonist, Oscar Lautensack, who takes part in the mesmerizing experience of
beholding Hitler at a Party rally:
Oscar's heart beat in the same rhythm as the heart of the crowd and admitted no careful
examination of what the man up there was saying. The speaker himself had not examined it at any
length. Rather he had worked himself into a kind of trance. He believed while he spoke. And
therefore the crowd believe, filled with fervour, and Oscar and the crowed were carried out of
themselves and filled with fervour.354
In exerting his influence on the masses, Feuchtwanger goes on to suggest that
Hitler's personality bore similar traits to that of a hypnotist or mind-reader. While this
view is a stretch of reality, Hitlers awareness of the importance of psychology in
understanding society is revealed through his writings, which also demonstrate his
considerable insight on how a leader might successfully control the people. In Mein
353 Mitterer, The Prince of Darkness, 503-504.
354 Feuchtwanger, Double, Double, Toil and Trouble, 38.
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Kampf he states: “An agitator who shows the ability of imparting an idea to the great
masses must be a psychologist” and in addition that, “to lead means: to be able to move
masses.”355 Moreover, that Hitler was one of the primary theorists responsible for
developing the Nazis' propaganda campaign, does suggests his genuine expertise on
certain aspects of human behaviour. Regarding this link between psychology and
propaganda, political theorist John Meaney notes that psychological coercion can exist for
individuals (citing the example of hypnosis), but questions the feasibility of implementing
such strategies on a grand societal scale. Regardless, Meaney notes that the tactics of
coercion employed by a skilled propaganda apparatus amounted to a powerful force of
persuasion that would have been difficult for anyone to resist, as he states:
The psychic penetration of the individual by using his own weaknesses as vehicles of entry and
the conquest of him through the resulting interior division and paralysis of strength are only a
small scale reproduction of the “Trojan horse” method of conquering nations.356
Feuchtwanger's implication that Nazism represented a form of psychological
coercion is supported in part by Theodor Adorno's assessment of the impact of Nazism on
Germany's social consciousness. According to Adorno, the style of Hitler's rule and the
effect of his charisma inadvertently awoke in the masses the portion of their collective
behaviour that seeks to maintain a compliant attitude towards powerful parent figures.
This resulted in the people's adoption of a “passive-massochistic attitude” in which
individuals were led to feel that submission before the authority of a threatening “primal
father” was necessary. Hitler can be understood to have fulfilled this role, which Adorno
saw as necessary for the creation of a communally self-identified “group ego.”357
However, Adorno goes on to argue that despite Hitler's successful use of
355 Hitler, Mein Kampf, 848.
356 Meaney, “Propaganda as Psychical Coercion,” 66-67.
357 Adorno, “Freudian Theory and the Pattern of Fascist Propaganda,” 138-142.
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psychological techniques in directing the masses, Nazi leaders were not sophisticated
enough to be familiar with the complexities of Freudian thought. Rather, he maintains that
the “psychology of fascism” was concerned with manipulation, and Hitler's style of rule
merely exploited a vulnerable aspect of human psychology. Furthermore, Adorno argues
that there is a fundamental phoniness to fascism, and questions the authenticity of the
communal ecstasy generated through political demonstrations, as he states: “They do not
really identify themselves with him [Hitler] but act this identification, perform their own
enthusiasm, and thus participate in their leader's performance.”358
Anti-Nazi resistance as a form of class warfare
Though the works discussed thus far have made use use of a wide range of
characters in order to present a multiplicity of perspectives, the subject of resistance has
not yet been discussed in detail. Some authors, such as Erika Mitterer, hardly give any
focus to the subject of resistance; though the virtuous characters of her novel struggle to
survive and preserve their ideals, they appear powerless to do anything more than observe
and endure as as society collapses around them. One author who is notable for promoting
a more active form of opposition is Bertolt Brecht, who presents the Third Reich through
a Marxist perspective and promotes radical opposition to the fascist regime.
This is apparent in his 1937 play titled Señora Carrar's Rifles, wherein a matronly
character announces her intention to fight the fascists, declaring “They're not human.
They're a canker and they've got to be burned out like a canker.”359 Brecht's 1942-1943
work, titled The Visions of Simone Machard360 (co-written by Lion Feuchtwanger) is
358 Adorno, “Freudian Theory and the Pattern of Fascist Propaganda,” 147-152.
359 Bertolt Brecht, “Señora Carrar's Rifles,” (original title: “Die Gewehre der Frau Carrar”), written and produced 1937, Collected
Plays, vol. 4, part 3, eds. John Willett and Ralph Manheim, trans. John Wilett, (London: Methuen, 1983), 123.
360 Written between 1942 and 1943, The Visions of Simone Machard is a play that takes aim at the lack of patriotism that undermined
efforts by the French to resist the German onslaught during the invasion of 1940, and the self-interested capitalists who sought to
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another example, in which a young French girl advocates for resistance against the
German army and burns a fuel deposit rather than let the invaders acquire it. The play is
heavily critical of civilian collaboration and the general lack of patriotic resistance.361
The plays of Bertolt Brecht frequently reference the need for the working classes
to rise up against their Nazi oppressors, who in turn are commonly presented as retaining
the worst elements of exploitative capitalism. Elements of a similar Marxist view are
found in the works of a number of authors, including Lion Feuchtwanger, Klaus Mann,
and Arnold Zwieg. Accordingly, resistance in works by these authors is often portrayed
through the context of a civil war, fought between the evil fascists and their industrialist
allies, and the oppressed under-classes of peasants and workers.
While the portrayal of anti-Nazi resistance as a form of class conflict was intended
to promote opposition, belief in an imminent civil war between communists and
nationalists was also one of the key premises that won popular support for the Nazi cause.
Before 1933, the uncertainty of democracy amidst unprecedented unemployment and
rising levels of street violence led to a growth in extremism across the political spectrum.
While economic hardship did draw some supporters to the Marxist cause, preexisting
anti-communist fears pushed a majority of the population towards non-communist
alternatives, including the Nazis. By positioning themselves as defenders of society
against an imminent communist threat, the Nazis strengthened their hold on power and
granted themselves the authority to rule with brutal force.362
benefit from the new rulers. Simone is a girl who channels the spirit of Joan of Arc, and risks her own life selflessly to sabotage
the Germans, and is betrayed by her countrymen as a result. However, she provides a positive example of how true French patriots
should act, with the implication that the French resistance would spring forth from similar roots.
361 Bertolt Brecht and Lion Feuchtwanger, “The Visions of Simone Machard,” (Die Gesichte der Simone Machard), written 19421943, produced 1957, Collected Plays, volume 7, eds. Ralph Manheim and John Willett, (New York: Vintage books (A division of
Random House), 1975), 49-50.
362 Gellately, Backing Hitler, 10-12.
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Anti-Nazi resistance as an existential struggle
An alternative to the Marxist view is provided through Hans Fallada's 1946 novel,
Every Man Dies Alone, in which resistance is depicted as a solitary struggle to preserve
one's sense of human decency. In light of the isolation faced by opponents to the regime
and the futility of their actions, resistance takes on the character of an existential struggle,
where the objective of defying the state becomes entwined with a search for meaning.
Based on true events, Fallada's portrayal of Berlin during the Third Reich adopts a
broad range of perspectives representing a diverse social panorama of everyday life under
Nazi rule, focusing on the small but meaningful acts of defiance carried out by ordinary
people. His protagonists, Otto and Anna Quangel, attempt to undermine the state by
anonymously distributing anti-Nazi messages on postcards around the city. Though they
are able to carry out their acts and blend in with society for a time, they suffer from
feelings of isolation, and are left disappointed when the hoped-for effect of their
resistance never materializes. They are eventually hunted down by Escherich the Gestapo
agent, captured, and sentenced to death.
The meaning of their resistance is made clear while Otto Quangel sits in prison
contemplating the hypocrisy of Nazi justice. Despite the futility of his rather small act of
defiance, Otto realizes that the purpose of his struggle was about the activity of resistance
rather than its results, and bore meaning as a defence of basic human decency. In the face
of the soul-crushing power of the state, defiance, no matter how small the act, is presented
as the one means by which an individual might preserve their humanity. This point is
shared by one of Otto's fellow prisoners, an intellectual who explains the importance of
their struggle on a personal and political level:
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At least you opposed evil. You weren't corrupted. You and I and many others locked up here, and
many more in other places of detention, and tens of thousands in concentration camps, they're all
resisting, [...] As it was, we all acted alone, we were caught alone, and every one of us will have to
die alone. But that doesn't mean that we are alone, Quangel, or that our deaths will be in vain.
Nothing in this world is done in vain, and since we are fighting for justice against brutality, we are
bound to prevail in the end.363
Similar perspectives on the meaning of resistance are found in other works of antiNazi literature. For example, in Anna Seghers' The Seventh Cross, the character of Franz
Marnet is used to illustrate the psychological conflict which accompanied acts of
defiance. Franz contemplates the the alluring idea of falling into line and joining the
obedient masses for the sake of his personal safety. However, despite his doubts, Franz
reaffirms his need to persist with the deep yearning for justice that defined his
existence.364 Despite the overwhelming power of the state and the debilitating terror
experienced by the masses, Anna Seghers' message of hope proclaims that humanity's
inner goodness was an unbreakable force which could be repressed but never destroyed.
This belief in the endurance of the human spirit is expressed by the prisoners of a
concentration camp, as narrated by an unnamed voice:
All of us felt how ruthlessly and fearfully outward powers could strike to the very core of man, but
at the same time we felt that at the very core there was something that was unassailable and
inviolable.365
A similar meaning is found in Lion Feuchwanger's Double, Double, Toil and
Trouble, wherein the character of Paul Cramer, a half-Jewish writer, expresses his dismay
before the rise of Nazism, which very few people actively resist:
And nowhere was there a serious determination to put an end to the evil. Everybody retreated
before them, made concessions. It was enough to turn one's stomach. More and more publishers
and newspapers hesitated to irritate their powerful opponent, and they told Paul they must dispense
with his collaboration if he would not drop his attacks on the Nazis.366
363 Ibid, 430.
364 Of this conviction, Seghers writes: “All my life I've wished for only the simplest things – a meadow or a boat, a book, friends, a
girl, to be surrounded by quiet. Then this other thing – this yearning for justice – came into my life. It happened when I was still
quite young. Slowly my life changed; now it is only outwardly quiet.” Anna Seghers, The Seventh Cross, 258.
365 Ibid, 338.
366 Feuchtwanger, Double, Double, Toil and Trouble, 128.
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Though he is aware of the futility behind his solitary effort, Paul launches himself against
the Nazis through literary attacks, justifying his activities as a compulsion born of his
profession, stating: “I’m a writer. Call me stupid and conceited if it gives you pleasure,
but I feel that it’s up to me to show people the web in which they’ve to be caught.”367 His
resistance takes on new meaning once he is imprisoned and the capacity to act is taken
away. Awaiting his execution, Paul Cramer is forced to contemplate the value of a
hopeless struggle, and acknowledges the fact his martyrdom would have little impact on
the world. However, he chooses not to kill himself (as the prison guards had encouraged),
and commits the ultimate act of passive resistance by allowing himself the luxury of
falling asleep in his cell; in doing so he refuses to lessen the burden of guilt that is owed
to his captors by ending his life for them.368
In these works, the depiction of resistance as a personal struggle faced by
individuals on both a spiritual and political level fits in with a long-standing
historiographical debate. Though opposition to Hitler's reign was widespread during the
Third Reich, fear of denunciation and the lack of organizational structure meant that for
many Germans, resistance was solitary, secretive, and left little trace. In the aftermath of
the Second World War, historians searched for examples of resistance within Germany,
and tended to overlook the acts of individuals in favour of the few organized groups
which did exist. Western historians have traditionally focused on the Valkyrie bomb
plotters, though the heroics of this group became questionable after it was revealed some
members had been long-term supporters of Hitler, and were not motivated by moral
367 Ibid, 162.
368 Ibid, 322-323.
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outrage against the Holocaust.369 At the same time, studies of anti-Nazi resistance in the
former Soviet Union gave emphasis to the efforts of communist organizations within
Germany (such as the KPD). However, since communists were subject to harsh
repression, most of their energy had been spent trying to maintain their organizational
structure, rather than actively fighting the regime.370
In the 1970s, a historiographical shift in focus towards 'normal' forms of
opposition came to regard non-organized acts of resistance as historically significant. In
this vein, historian Martin Broszat viewed resistance as a direct reflection of the particular
relations between the rulers and the ruled. His argument maintained that in an
“asymmetrical” system of rule (in which there is no balance or bargain of power between
the rulers and the ruled), any form of opposition that undermines the government's 'total
rule' should be considered a form of resistance; this could include small everyday acts,
which he calls “resistenz.” Resistenz was typified by behavioural, morally neutral,
independent and non-organized acts, which as a form of resistance could be partial,
limited in scope, or directed towards specific aspects of Nazi rule. Broszat's view was
criticized for the fact many 'resistenz' activities had very little impact on the regime, and
for being an overly broad concept that excluded considerations of moral intention. Other
historians (notably Peter Steinbach and Hans Mommsen) viewed resistance as a process
tailored to the context of individual circumstances, and should not be viewed in
generalized concrete terms.371
Another way to view anti-Nazi resistance is with consideration for the
369 Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil, New York: Penguin Books, 1964, 100.
370 Kershaw, The Nazi Dictatorship, 173.
371 Ibid, 152-163, 172-173, 177.
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consequences that could result from acts of defiance. The strict regulation of German
society turned even mundane acts of disobedience into major criminal offences, as
indicated by the number of crimes punishable by death, which rose from three to forty-six
during the Second World War.372 Fallada's vision of the Third Reich reflects this harsh
reality, and supports Broszat's concept of “resistenz,” as he writes: “Whether their act was
big or small, no one could risk more than his life. Each according to his strength and
abilities, but the main thing was, you fought back.”373
While the above mentioned works of anti-Nazi literature emphasize how
resistance could take place as a private struggle, the conflict faced by individuals was also
designed to reflect the greater context of Germany's moral turmoil. Though the specifics
of this view are defined according to the particular perspective of authors, the prevailing
notion communicated through anti-Nazi literature maintains that humanity's yearning for
justice was a force which would eventually prevail over the brutality of Nazi repression
by enduring and outlasting evil.
The spiritual cost of collaboration
The idea that resistance offered its own reward reflects an essential element of the
anti-Nazi worldview, and indicates belief on the part of authors in some form of cosmic
justice which would bring punishment to the wicked and restore balance to German
society. Accordingly, the notion that the cost of collaboration was greater than its reward
appears as a reoccurring them of anti-Nazi literature.
An example of this is found in Hans Fallada's Every Man Dies Alone, where the
372 Ibid, 172.
373 Fallada, Every Man Dies Alone, 132.
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figure of the suffering perpetrator is used to portray the negative consequences of
collaboration. In one instance, Fallada depicts a group of Nazi prison guards as men
whose soul-crushing duties had so degraded their essence as human beings that they had
been reduced to the status of unfeeling automatons.374 A more detailed exploration of this
idea is found in the character of Escherich the Gestapo agent. Throughout his
investigation into the Quangels' acts of defiance, he maintains a cold and professional
demeanour, does not view the suspects as real humans, and does his best to ignore matters
of 'justice' or morality in relation to their actual crimes. However, when he finally
achieves victory and apprehends the suspects, he is overcome with guilt for his role in
perpetrating evil and commits suicide.375
A key notion advanced through Fallada's text maintains that everyone is doomed
to their fate, and Germans in particular faced violent death as an imminent prospect
regardless of their chosen path. Since the increasingly paranoid and arbitrary police
authorities could target anyone, and the allied bombing raids could strike anywhere,
obedience and political neutrality were no longer guaranteed to provide any degree of
safety. This lack of security made the individual's fight for decency ever more urgent, for
those who collaborated with the Nazis still risked their lives, but did so for the sake of
evil. Otto Quangel makes this point clear as he confronts his Nazi-appointed defence
attorney, a man who recognizes the evil of the Nazi state, but collaborates regardless:
What was your price for turning into such a fine gentleman, with creased trousers and polished
fingernails and deceitful concluding speeches? What did you have to pay? [...] And you will
continue to pay more and more, and maybe one day, like me, you will pay with your life, but you
will have done it for your indecency! [...] You know perfectly well that the man behind bars is the
decent one, and you on the outside are a scoundrel, that the criminal is free, and the decent man is
374 Ibid, 474-475.
375 Ibid, 378.
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sentenced to death.376
A similar notion is advanced through Lion Feuchtwanger's Double, Double, Toil
and Trouble, wherein the focal character, Oscar Lautensack (a stage magician), is
understood to have sold his integrity to the Nazis in exchange for fame and wealth. As his
tastes grow ever more extravagant, it becomes clear that his materialist opulence is
limitless, leading him to state, “If you haven't too much, you've too little.”377 The fixation
on wealth may also reflect the Marxist influence on Feuchtwanger's writing, wherein the
Nazi Party is attributed the worst elements of exploitationist capitalism. The irony of
Oscar's success is that his initial dissatisfaction lay in his desire to be considered a great
artist, rather than a famous playboy. In keeping with the notion that collaboration would
end up costing more than resistance, Oscar's good fortune comes to an abrupt end as he
falls out of favour with Hitler and is abandoned by his former admirers. After he is left in
ruin, his own brother betrays him at the command of his Nazi superiors.
Klaus Mann's Mephisto tells a strikingly similar story (based on true events)378
about a stage actor by the name of Hendrik Höfgen who trades his integrity for a chance
at success under Nazi patronage. While similar elements such as the temptations of
wealth and fame appear in this work, the emphasis of Mann's novel is on the gradual
process of change which leads him by degrees towards full collaboration, despite his best
efforts at remaining an independent artist.
In the beginning, Höfgen is a pronounced Marxist who takes part in ridiculing the
Nazis along-side his leftist colleagues. After 1933 he refuses exile in the hopes of
376 Ibid, 480.
377 Feuchtwanger, Double, Double, Toil and Trouble, 152.
378 The novel was a relatively thinly-veiled criticism of the accomplished actor, Gustaf Grüngens, whose career flourished during
Nazi rule and who was also the former brother-in-law to Klaus Mann.
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maintaining his career, and continues to privately express his anti-Nazi views. However,
when his fame starts to blossom as a result of Nazi patronage, his true loyalty is revealed
as a selfish drive for wealth and fame, and the full extent of his collaboration becomes
increasingly difficult to deny.
The double life of acting the Nazi in public while claiming to retain moral
integrity in private (a prominent element of both Feuchtwanger and Mann's texts) is
suggestive towards a coping mechanism that historian Robert Lifton describes as
“doubling,” whereby the self is divided into two functioning wholes, allowing the
individual to perform acts that violated their moral conscience without destroying it
entirely. According to Lifton, the 'prior self' serves to maintain identity and moral
grounding, while the 'Nazi self' performs the evil necessities of collaboration, and absorbs
the resulting guilt.379
While Klaus Mann's text does not end with Höfgen's destruction, it is made clear
that the penalty incurred by his collaboration results in the corruption of his soul. To
convey this idea, Mann attributes the actor with an obsession for Hamlet, a role that he is
unable to play convincingly due to his moral contamination under Nazi patronage:
I've got to play you. If I fail at playing you, I'll have failed everything. You're my ordeal by fire;
I've got to pass. My whole life, all the sins I've committed, my great betrayal, all my shame can
only be vindicated by my art. But I'm an artist only if I can play Hamlet. [...] You are not Hamlet,
you don't have the nobility that only suffering and experience can give. You are merely the monkey
of power, a clown to entertain murderers. [...] You had the choice, my dear fellow, between
nobility and a career. You made your choice.380
The above examples demonstrate how authors envisioned the dilemma faced by
German professionals under Nazi rule; of having to choose between success and moral
379 While Lifton describes “doubling” in relation to the duties of Nazi medical doctors serving the concentration camps, he notes that
it is a tactic that could be seen throughout the Nazi realm, signified by the slippery slope of compromises, from grudging
cooperation to increasingly incriminating acts, and towards full collaboration. Robert J. Lifton, The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing
and the Psychology of Genocide, (New York: Basic Books, 1986), 418-419, 423, 426.
380 Mann, Mephisto, 254.
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integrity. This was a conflict known to authors on a personal basis, and their conclusions
likely played a decisive role in encouraging their continued defiance. Similarly,
descriptions of the factors which led to collaboration relate to real temptations that would
have been faced by authors; it was not maliciousness or insanity that led to collaboration
with the Nazis, but a rational desire for professional success.
Beyond this personal significance, the social commentary of anti-Nazi literature
on the collaborative role played by artists relates directly to an element of reality. Many
artists such as Arno Breker, Adolf Ziegler, Josef Thorak, and Leni Riefenstahl, were
actively involved in promoting the ideals of the state, and benefited handsomely from
Nazi patronage.381 After the collapse of the Third Reich, Arno Breker, the Nazi-appointed
state sculptor, defended his collaboration as the rational decision of an ambitious
professional, stating, “In my capacity as an artist I could hardly reject artistic
commissions, especially those from leading personalities of the Third Reich.”382
Moreover, the perception that professional collaboration came as the result of a
gradual process, most notably evident in Klaus Mann's text, also reflects an aspect of
historical reality. According to historian Randal Bytwerk, the coercive power of Nazi
propaganda was designed to bend the will of opposition gradually through a corrosion of
the people's political, social, and moral barriers.383 Similarly, John Meaney describes the
success of Hitler's propaganda campaign as a result of the “concentration” technique, the
first step of which involved the staging of demands one at a time, thereby achieving a
greater degree of success over time than what would have been possible through an
381 As an example, the painter Adolf Ziegler was placed at the head of the Reich Chamber for the Visual Arts and helped ensure that
anti-Modernist policies would be obeyed, while both Arno Breker and Josef Thorak were granted prestigious titles, comissions,
and personal studios. Hinz, “'Degenerate' and 'Authentic': Aspects of Art and Power in the Third Reich,” 332.
382 Petropoulos, The Faustian Bargain, 218.
383 Bytwerk, Bending Spines, 1-4.
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immediate grasp at total control.384
In this vein, Fred Alford argues that bureaucratization was a crucial element that
contributed to the coercive power of the Nazi state for its effect of fragmenting tasks so
that individuals might remain oblivious to the broad implications of their actions. In Nazi
Germany, this also had the effect of separating responsibility for actions from their
implementation, thus encouraging participants of the system to do things they would not
do as individuals. The distancing effect created by bureaucratization allowed perpetrators
up and down the chain of command to claim their actions were strictly professional in
motive, conducted without malevolence and in accordance with duty.385
Career ambition as a motivating cause for collaboration also relates to Hannah
Arendt's theory on the 'banality of evil', which presupposes that some of the most
heinously evil deeds could be motivated by relatively trivial causes, such as the common
desire to advance one's career. Arendt argues that intentions did not have to be malicious
for evil to take place, and that under the right conditions, the most ordinary 'good' person
could be capable of performing some of history's most terrible crimes. Our desire to
attribute great evil to psychopathy or sadism relates more our desire to distance evil from
ourselves, and to see Nazis as somehow different from 'normal' human beings.386
The 'true Nazi' as a figure of exceptional evil
Despite Arendt's view, the idea that the Nazis were simply evil human beings
persists as a common explanation for Nazi crimes, as described earlier through the
384 Meaney, “Propaganda as Psychical Coercion,” 71-73.
385 Fred Alford, “The Organization of Evil,” Political Psychology, vol. 11, no. 1 (Mar., 1990), 18-19.
386 Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem, 25-26, 246-247, 272-279; Neiman, Evil in Modern Thought, 271-277.
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Danielle Goldhagen controversy.387 To support this idea, the figure of the 'true Nazi'
appears in anti-Nazi literature as an exceptionally cruel and self-consciously evil
character, typically filling a small but important role as the epitome of the fascist ideal. In
some works, authors explore the perspective of such individuals, who express their belief
in evil through an appreciation for chaos, destruction, and carnage, and celebrate the inner
darkness of the human soul. In turn, they cast scorn against such 'civilized' notions as
mercy, empathy, and human equality as the outdated values of a dying era.
One example is found in Lion Feuchtwanger's Double, Double, Toil and Trouble,
where the character of Hans Lautensack (a Nazi Party member) addresses the criticism of
his intellectual adversary, Paul Cramer. While Cramer attempts to warn the public about
how Nazism represented a threat to the positive light of civilization, Hans Lautensack
accepts this criticism as a truthful assessment of their movement, stating:
What is your objection to darkness, Herr Cramer? Why shouldn't we let it close in? There are many
whose eyes are hurt by the light. By far the greatest number, nine hundred and ninety-nine out of a
thousand, feel more comfortable in the dark. [...] Your “light” is hopelessly doomed to extinction.
[...] Since for better or worse one lived in an era of darkness, one couldn't live as if one were in an
era of light.388
A similar example is found in Klaus Mann's portrayal of an ideologically motivated Nazi
poet who expresses his preference for the inner darkness of the human soul:
Our beloved Führer is dragging us toward the shades of darkness and everlasting nothingness.
How can we poets, who have a special affinity for darkness and the lower depths, not admire him?
It is absolutely no exaggeration to call our Führer godlike. He is the god of the Underworld, who
has always been the most sacred of all for those initiated in black magic. I have a boundless
admiration for him, because I have a boundless hatred of the dreary tyranny of reason and the
bourgeois fetish concept of progress. All poets worthy of the name are sworn enemies of progress.
Poetry itself is in any case a reversion to the sacred primitive state of humanity, before it became
civilized. Poetry and slaughter, blood and song, murder and hymns-they are inseparable. Yes, I love
catastrophe.389
Numerous other examples appear throughout the works of anti-Nazi authors, some of
387 For further details, see pages 4-5.
388 Feuchtwanger, Double, Double, Toil and Trouble, 123.
389 Mann, Mephisto, 202-203.
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which include the figure of the inquisitor from Mitterer's The Prince of Darkness, the SS
police chief in Fallada's Every Man Dies Alone, the 'lemur people' (an allusion to the
Gestapo) from Jünger's On Marble Cliffs, the police interrogator from Remarque's The
Arch of Triumph, and the concentration camp commander from Seghers' The Seventh
Cross, to name but a few. While characters such as these do not explain why Nazism rose
to power, nor what motivated ordinary people to collaborate, they do serve to illustrate
how authors believed Nazism served the interests of a certain class of sadistic killers.
While the figure of the true Nazi appears with great prevalence in many works of
anti-Nazi literature, it is noteworthy that such a simplistic view of evil is never used to
explain the phenomenon of Nazism as a whole. Rather, the 'true Nazi' appears as a
contrasting figure to the typical Nazi supporter (who is morally conflicted, frightened, and
driven by promises of reward into acts of collaboration). In anti-Nazi literature, 'true
Nazis' appear as the minority of the German population who carry out the most brutal acts
with eager enthusiasm, and serve in this way as a representation of the worst elements of
humanity that were allowed to flourish under Hitler's protection.
Duty, self-destruction, and redemption
With regards to the motives of ordinary Germans as collaborators, the subject of
duty has not yet been explored in relation to its treatment by anti-Nazi authors. While
most of the works used in this research feature some form of critique on this subject,
Arnold Zweig's The Axe of Wandsbek and Theodore Plievier's390 Stalingrad391 stand out
390 Theodor Plievier (1892-1955) fled to Russia during the Second World War and witnessed the civilian struggle in Moscow during
1941-1942. The following year, he read the personal correspondences of captured German letters, and conducted interviews with
German prisoners of war following the battle of Stalingrad. M. Paul Holsinger and Mary Anne Schofield, Visions of War: World
War II in Popular Literature and Culture, (Madison WI.: Popular Press, 1992), 36-38.
391 Stalingrad documents the struggle for survival faced by German soldiers in the Hellish landscape of the Eastern Front. The
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for their emphasis on the role of duty as a contributing factor behind German destruction.
While each author approaches the subject from a distinct perspective, their shared
conclusion suggests that destruction or death were the natural rewards for obedience
before evil authorities, and was the fate which awaited all of Germany should the
shackles of duty remain unbroken.
In many ways, the meaning of Arnold Zweig's 1948 novel, The Axe of Wandsbek,
is similar to Klaus Mann's Mephisto and Feuchtwanger's Double, Double, Toil and
Trouble, in that the central theme relates to the deadly cost of collaboration. Based on true
events, Zweig's narrative follows the character of Albert Teetjen (a butcher by trade) who
assists the Nazi Party by carrying out a number of executions, and the financial, spiritual,
and physical ruin that follows for him and his wife, named Stine. A key difference
between this work and the others is that the lead character, Albert Teetjen, is primarily
motivated by a strong sense of duty, in addition to his financial needs. When Albert
Teetjen is approached by a Nazi official and offered the job of executioner, he is reluctant
because he sees the taking of human life as a sin, but he soon accepts the burden. He
justifies his actions based on the fact they were carried out as a matter of duty, and
performed in accordance with the law. In this way, Zweig's portrayal of the Nazi
executioner was not intended to show the inner workings of an evil or twisted mind or as
a critique of blind ambition, but to illuminate the motivations of an ordinary law-abiding
man.
The remainder of the narrative focuses on the repercussions of his collaboration,
account was inspired by the first-hand testimony of German prisoners of war who survived the battle, and focuses on groups of
soldiers as they struggle to survive. As a political critique, the novel lays considerable blame on the Nazi leadership, as well as the
military command for their obedience towards “insane” superiors.
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as the community reviles him for his crime and shuns his business. To add to his misery,
Teetjen's Nazi comrades abandon him, only seeking to benefit from his ruin. Albert
Teetjen's disillusionment with the Party grows as he and his wife sink deeper into debt
and face ever harsher degrees isolation.392 In the end, both Albert and his wife commit
suicide to escape the shame and degradation of their lives.
Arnold Zweig is careful to portray his subjects in sympathetic terms as simpleminded and obedient pawns caught in the game of Nazi politics. Though they bore guilt
for their crimes of collaboration, they were also individuals who had clung to decency,
and realized too late the error of their ways. In this way, destruction and hardship is not
entirely without value, for it is only as a result of their broken spirits that these individuals
become awakened to the true nature of Nazism and the crime of their obedience, after
which they go on to achieve a degree of redemption.393 The implication of Zweig's novel
suggests many Nazis were naive and duty-bound in their sense of Party loyalty, and that
only the catastrophe of defeat could reveal to them the truth.
The theme of awakening conscience and redemption through destruction is also
prominent in Theodore Plievier's Stalingrad. The narrative, which is based on the witness
testimony of German prisoners of war, follows a group of soldiers through the horrific
battle of Stalingrad. Plievier's depiction of the battle is presented as the climax of the
Third Reich in which the entire structure of the Nazi state – the war, the racism, the
military ethos – converge in a maelstrom of cataclysmic ruin.
392 Zweig writes: “Yesterday he had still believed in his Führer, but today something seemed to have gone wrong with the Party, some
indefinite and impalpable evil presence had slipped between him and his fellows, between him and his people.” Zweig, The Axe of
Wandsbek, 303
393 Though this awakening comes too late to save the Teetjens, their redemption is alluded to through a last-moment vision of the
executed prisoners, who regard Albert's suicide with approval: “They carried their heads once more upon their shoulders, and the
expression in their faces said: It shall suffice.” Ibid, 376.
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The context of war and focus on soldiers makes this text distinct from those of
other authors in that events unfold within the context of the military organization as
opposed to the social context of everyday life. Nevertheless, the subjects of motivation,
collaboration, and resistance remain highly relevant to the experience of soldiers.
Stalingrad focuses in this way on the problem of duty, which in relation to Nazism,
prevents the individual soldier from opposing that which is deemed evil. According to
Plievier, in the world of inverted morality brought about by Nazi rule, the best virtues of
the common soldier, his “unconditional faith” become “his greatest fault”394 Despite being
completely demoralized by war and disillusioned with the Nazi leadership, the officers
and generals seem incapable of disobedience, for even as they are ordered to accept death,
they instinctively respond with the thought: “The order will be carried through.”395 This
dilemma, of being commanded to perform self-sacrifice in a hopeless situation, is
extended to the entire military and indeed the whole of the German nation, for whom the
“the only decision that remained was: suicide or not.”396
The character of General Vilshofen (a recently promoted general), becomes the
voice of enlightened reason, who, after becoming disgusted with “military madness,”
questions why disobedience or mutiny had never arisen. He asks:
Good god, where was the commander in chief, where was the general, where the officer who
would put a stop to this shameful spectacle, who would give the signal for disobedience? It would
no longer be disobedience; it was the command of the hour, obedience to a higher duty. And, if the
signal did not come, where were the people, where were the men who could cast aside their false
leaders and act for themselves?397
He condemns the military ethic of 'duty' in light of the apparent insanity of the political
authorities, and takes the responsibility upon himself to advise his comrades to rebel, to
394 Theodor Plievier, Stalingrad, trans. Richard and Clara Winston, (New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1948), 280.
395 Ibid, 222.
396 Ibid, 259-260.
397 Ibid, 170-171
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choose life over death, and to surrender to the enemy. Plievier writes:
When this state of affairs first became apparent [...] then we should have taken our own decision
and overridden the madness of our superiors. But instead we remained instruments carrying out
orders issued by the inmates of a madhouse, and we are, to this day.398
At stake is not only the soldiers' living existence, but the legacy their self-sacrifice would
leave as a gift to the Nazis and a curse to future generations by making the the battle of
Stalingrad seem glorious. This concern wins through, and what is left of the German army
surrenders, following the high commander's lead.399
The catastrophe of Stalingrad is treated by Plievier in this way as a highly
symbolic turning point for the soul of the German people; that the reign of Nazism
embodied a triumph of evil, and Stalingrad represented the sacrifice of blood that was
necessary to compensate for such a great sin. To the author, the crucial importance of
Stalingrad was that it revealed the madness and brutality of the Nazis' ideological
worldview, as Vilshofen observes:
The strong eat up the weak; the weak fall; the sick lie and are left behind. It's all logical. If a man is
sick and can no longer crawl to the feed trough, it shows poor breeding, inferior racial stock. But
those who steal from others and fill their own bellies will live a few minutes longer and are
therefore of superior stock. Latte, have you had a chance to see those corpses with skulls cracked
open and the brains eaten out? [...] I've seen them – and the men that can do that are the chosen
people in this death trap and may survive [...] And that is the logical consequence, that is the goal
we've been heading toward, not only since yesterday [...] That is the logical consequence of the
doctrine of superior races.400
In this way, Plievier takes direct aim at the Nazis' racist ideology and presents the carnage
and destruction of Stalingrad as the cumulative effect of their racial beliefs. Though the
terrible price of this lesson is appalling, it is also necessary in order live “beyond
Stalingrad” in defiance against “military madness” and the evils of insane political
leadership:
398 Ibid, 281.
399 Ibid, 326-327.
400 Ibid, 122.
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Stalingrad was necessary, not for us to triumph, but for us to learn a lesson. [...] It must mean to
turn away from the long wrong road we have travelled, to turn away from our own wrongdoing
and above all from the wrongs we have committed against our true selves. 401
Regarding the problem of duty, Plievier's novel celebrates individuality and
personal acts of defiance as the heroic first step towards the reemergence of a new
Germany. In the context of Stalingrad, defying authority required a recognition that
Nazism was an ideology set to destroy itself, and that the ruined bodies of soldiers'
corpses were the only natural outcome of Germany's misguided beliefs. While the
characters within Plievier's novel are not burdened with concern for race or nationalism,
belief in duty affects their fate directly, and had been heavily influenced as a concept by
the celebration of patriotism in Nazi ideology. This view is supported by theorist Jacques
Ellul, who argues that, because of the extreme hardships of modern warfare, it was
necessary for 'duty to the nation' to become a part of political ideology, as represented
through propaganda. He writes:
Man must be plunged into a mystical atmosphere, he must be given strong enough impulses as
well as good enough reasons for his sacrifices, and at the same time, a drug that will sustain his
nerves and his moral. Patriotism must become “ideological”. Only propaganda can put man into a
state of nervous endurance that will permit him to face the tension of war.402
Disillusionment and the loss of personal agency
A similar focus on the plight of the common soldier is found in the works of
Heinrich Böll,403 where the Third Reich is presented according to the perspective of
disillusioned young men caught in the rigidly structured yet chaotic world of military
madness. Similar to Plievier's depiction, Böll presents self-destruction as one of the chief
401 Ibid, 169.
402 Ellul, Propaganda, 143.
403 Heinrich Böll (1917-1985) was still a teenager when Hitler came to power, and was conscripted into the German Wehrmacht
during the Second World War where he was wounded four times before being captured by American forces. In 1946, following his
release, he devoted himself to writing, and his early works (1946-1949) revolve around his experiences as a soldier. Frank Finlay,
“"Ein krampfhaftes Augenzumachen": Heinrich Böll and the "Literaturbetrieb" of the Early Post-War Years,” Monatshefte , vol.
95, no. 1 (Spring, 2003), 97-100.
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effects brought to Germany as a result of the Nazis' misguided views. This is
communicated through a short story titled, “Stranger, bear word to the Spartans we...”. In
this work, a vision of the destructive effects of Nazism on the individual and the State is
shown through the eyes of a young soldier who awakes in a make-shift hospital ward,
only to discover that the room is part of his old school-house, and he is horrifically
wounded. When the soldier had been a student at this very school, he had been taught the
ideology of race and nationalism that filled him with enthusiasm for war, and now the
student, the school, and the country at large lay in burnt ruin because of those beliefs.404
In addition to this concern for self-destruction, a distinct theme of Böll's writings
focuses on the loss of personal agency brought about as a result of martial authority.
Under such conditions, resistance is expressed through small acts of self indulgence, as
individuals seek to regain some semblance of control over their lives.
In the short story, “That Time We Were in Odessa,” a frightened young man is
forced to pass the time in occupied Ukraine while he waits for his transport to the Eastern
front, where he is certain he will be killed.405 His plight is his hatred for army life, his fear
of impending death, and his general lack of freedom. To escape is impossible, but he
seeks refuge in distraction, and avoids the confines of his barracks.
Similarly, in “Children are Civilians Too” the perspective of a young wounded
soldier is adopted as he is pitted against the arbitrary rules governing military life. As the
protagonist awaits recovery in a field hospital on the Eastern Front, he attempts to buy a
pastry from a Russian girl, but is prevented by a guard on the grounds that it is forbidden
404 Heinrich Böll, “Stranger, bear word to the Spartans we...” Children are Civlians Too. (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company,
1970), 34-43.
405 Heinrich Böll, “That Time We Were in Odessa,” Children are Civlians Too, (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1970), 30.
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for soldiers to interact with civilians.406 He violates this rule, and barters with the girl in
secret. This minor act of selfish defiance serves as a re-affirmation of his will, and though
it is small in scale, serves as a rebellion against the militaristic belief wherein the needs of
the many always outweigh the wants of the few.
Böll's depiction of military life as an intensely emasculating and debilitating
experience also serves to contradict the macho ideals put forth by Nazi propaganda
regarding masculinity and martial virtues. Despite showing considerable sympathy for the
plight of the common soldier, the author also expresses deep contempt for the brotherly
comradeship-of-arms that was expected of young men, as well as the romantic notions of
duty and self-sacrifice that contributed to driving soldiers to their deaths. Böll is distinct
in this way from Plievier, who adopted a more traditional view of a morally upright,
though tragically doomed, professional soldier.
Whereas Stalingrad casts criticism against the military's sense of duty (for its role
in preventing disobedience), Böll focuses on the immediate horrors of enlisted existence
and the lack of personal freedom faced by young men. In his novel, The Train was on
Time, the protagonist boards a train against his wishes knowing he is being taken towards
his death, creating a strong impression of impending doom and powerlessness.407 It is the
deep desire of this novel's protagonist to escape the war, to live simply, to indulge in
human companionship, and most importantly to experience love. A similar interest is
found in his short story, “Drinking in Petöcki,” in which a soldier on temporary leave
attempts to drink away his thoughts of the war, and focuses instead on the beauty of
406 Heinrich Böll, “Children are Civilians Too,” Children are Civlians Too, (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1970), 57-58.
407 Heinrich Böll, The Train was on Time, (Original title: Der Zug war pünktlich), first published in 1949, trans. Leila Vennewitz.
(London: Martin Secker & Warburg Limited, 1973), 6, 11.
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young love, music, and the simple pleasures of care-free life.408
Though Heinrich Böll's literature is disparaging towards martial ideals, his works
also show sympathy for the common man as essentially innocent and childlike in his lack
of freedom, and for his ultimately doomed prospects in life. In this context, the evil of
Nazism is not a matter of brutality or hateful ideology, nor is collaboration attached to a
particular motive, such as greed or fear. Rather, Böll's criticism is directed against the
coercive and dominating social environment brought on as a result of Nazi rule, wherein
the individual's lack of freedom binds them to a fate beyond their control or choosing.
Consequentially, resistance in these works focuses on the measures taken by reluctant
German soldiers to extricate themselves from the system of Nazi power and reassert some
degree of independence. As found in previous discussions of resistance as an existential
struggle, finding the will to carry on with opposition despite the unlikely prospect of
success proves a reoccurring obstacle for protagonists to overcome.
Conclusion
The question of what motivated ordinary Germans to accept the Nazi cause
highlights a pivotal difference between the Nazi and anti-Nazi worldviews. A crucial
element of this divide hinged upon their respective understanding of the individual's
relationship to the state, specifically with regards to their need to resist evil while
upholding ideals of goodness. While Nazi propaganda sought to undermine the value of
individuality in favour of a collective identity, anti-Nazi authors present resistance against
408 Heinrich Böll, “Drinking in Petöcki” (1950). Children are Civlians Too. (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1970), 46.
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evil as a deeply personal struggle in which freedom of choice and action were the
determining factors behind moral integrity.
Through this comparison of worldviews, the depiction of the Third Reich by antiNazi authors suggests that the ideals of Nazi propaganda were directly opposed by the
realities of their rule. While propagandists promised the German people a meaningful
place in their new community as part of a collective identity with a noble group ambition,
a contradictory view is presented through literary portrayals of everyday life in the Third
Reich where the individual's primary experience was of fear and isolation.409 Similarly,
the ideological vision of the noble warrior as an eternal and glorious ideal of manhood is
negated by authors who write of the dehumanizing and emasculating effects of war,
which not only strips the individual of all sense of personal agency, but brings ruin and
destruction to the German homeland.410 With regards to culture, Nazi art was used to
convey an idea that National Socialism heralded a return to the purity and nobility of the
ancient world; anti-Nazi authors contradict this view by portraying the National Socialist
movement as a return to the primeval darkness of humanity's barbarian past, and as an
overturning of all the goodness inherited through the progression of cultural
civilization.411 Finally, the defeat of Nazism was presented by propagandists in
apocalyptic terms as an event that would bring and end to European civilization, but antiNazi writers depict the end of civilization as having already occurred in Germany through
Nazism's rise.
Though anti-Nazi literature presents a clear contradiction of the Nazi worldview,
409 Three novels that highlight this form of criticism are Hans Fallada's Every Man Dies Alone, Anna Seghers' The Seventh Cross, and
Erika Mitterer's The Prince of Darkness.
410 The two authors who communicate this facet of criticism are Theodor Plievier and Heinrich Böll,
411 Ernst Jünger's On Marble Cliffs, Lion Feuchtwanger's Double, Double, Toil and Trouble, and Klaus Mann's Mephisto provide the
best illustrations of this view.
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directly refuting National Socialist ideology was not the principle aim of writers. In most
works, Nazi ideology is either disregarded or treated only as evidence of deception;412
nowhere is belief in National Socialism used to explain the wider phenomenon of its rise.
Rather, one of the most compelling and frequently discussed threats posed by the Nazi
state was its ability to procure obedience and cooperation from ordinary people despite
their lack of authentic belief in the National Socialist cause. A wide variety of other
causes were used to explain the people's motives, including fear of persecution,
irrationality, mass hysteria, sense of duty, ambition, greed, lust for power, and sense of
powerlessness. Whether cooperation from the masses was garnered through appeals to
their existing desires or the exploitation of common fears, the general conclusion on
Nazism maintained that the authorities could rely on the people's active support, despite
the unpopularity of their rule.
Underlying the differences in perspective and opinion shown by anti-Nazi authors,
the collective vision presented through their combined works serve as a fairly accurate
reflection of post-war historiography. Many historians of the Functionalist school
attribute the behaviour and motivation of Nazi perpetrators (as well as their collaborators)
to a broad variety of interrelating causes, most of which did not require true belief in
Nazism. For instance, one approach to the Holocaust takes aim at the bureaucracy of the
Nazi state, which fostered competition, rewarded ambition, and compartmentalized the
roles of perpetrators; this combined into a system which encouraged ruthlessness and
served to distance individuals from responsibility for their actions. Other historians focus
on the immense pressures to conform brought through the social context of the Third
412 See chapter one, page 35 onwards.
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Reich, which included such elements as total propaganda, fear of arbitrary persecution,
and the coercive power of peer influence.413 Though it is widely acknowledged that Hitler
did enjoy a strong element of popular support (particularly during the early years of his
rule), few historians argue that the Holocaust and the wider phenomenon of Nazism can
be attributed to such a simplistic cause as the people's belief in National Socialist
ideology.
Since individual belief in Nazism was not presented by authors as the crucial
element behind the people's obedience during the Third Reich, one must regard
individuality itself as the underlying variable which either drove conformity or inspired
resistance. The role of the individual in relation to the state is a subject which appears
with great prominence in both Nazi propaganda and anti-Nazi literature, and according to
either worldview, is presented as the key to Germany's success or failure in its struggle
between good and evil.
On the one hand, Nazi propaganda set out to challenge the value of individuality
in every form it could. The Nazis viewed humanity collectively as racially divided into
defined groups with innate characteristics, whose behaviour and mode of thought
stemmed from inherent traits. People did not become who they were because of their
social context, upbringing, or personal decisions; rather, race was the key to all human
behaviour, and individuals were encouraged to think of themselves and others in these
terms. Individuality was also presented as contrary to the Germanic characteristic of
willingness to perform self-sacrifice for the sake of the community. Additionally, the
defining element behind forming the Nazis' social ideal (called the 'new community')
413 See discussion of Functionalism on pages 3-4.
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hinged on the people's desire to surrender their individuality in favour of joining a group
consciousness, or mass identity. The disdain for individuality is also evident in the broad
objectives of propaganda, which sought to win over the masses rather than convert
individuals through the power of reason, and attributed greater value to the assumed
generalities of the populace rather than the particular traits of its outstanding citizens.
Hand-in-hand with the persecution of 'outsiders' and dissidents, propagandists sought to
reform the fractious masses into a harmonious whole that operated with the hive-like
mentality of a great collective organism.
Conversely, the struggle against evil in anti-Nazi literature revolved around the
moral integrity of the individual and their desire for personal freedom. Since the majority
of ordinary Germans appear driven by fears or lured through promises of reward into
various degrees of obedience and cooperation (and only the most simple-minded of fools
are shown accepting the Nazi belief structure willingly), authors express the true power of
the Nazi state through its ability to control the behaviour of individuals. In this context,
resistance becomes a deeply personal and largely solitary struggle, as individuals must
find the will to persevere without succumbing to despair, despite overwhelming odds and
their own political impotence. Maintaining one's sense of individuality proves vital to this
struggle, as it entails opposing the authorities through small but meaningful gestures of
defiance that symbolically undermine the state's total control.
Both the Nazi and anti-Nazi worldviews present their struggle as a conflict
between good and evil that, once recognized, created a moral imperative that could not be
ignored. The divergent notions of good and evil behind either perspective are tied in this
way to the supposed motives attached to the supporters of either cause, with the subject of
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individuality highlighting the crux of the divide between them. With ideology and
political opinion stripped away, the conflict of ideas between Nazi propagandists and antiNazi authors was about competing notions of good and evil, as characterized by the
celebration of individual identity and personal moral values on the part of anti-Nazi
authors, and on the part of the Nazis, through their belief in the superior importance of
collective identity and group survival.
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CHAPTER 4
Conclusion
The purpose of this thesis has been to examine how Germans envisioned the world
during the Third Reich, with the aim of shedding light on this era using the the ideas and
values communicated through Nazi and anti-Nazi cultural sources to compare the most
important aspects of each worldview, and identify their differences. Since this aim is still
very broad, the concept of evil was chosen to serve as the focus for this comparison.
Evil was selected for two reasons. Firstly, it appears at the centre of attention from
both the Nazi and anti-Nazi perspectives, which is hardly surprising, since most
worldviews are constructed in some way from notions of good and evil. The second
reason relates to the legacy of Nazism, both in the popular consciousness, and ongoing
matters of historiographical discourse. In the historiography of Nazism, evil remains a
topic of considerable disagreement, as experts from multiple fields continue to argue
about the nature of guilt, the forms of resistance, the manner of collaboration, the extent
of complicity, the motives behind actions, and the severity of crimes. Though the meaning
of evil is not the specific focus of these debates, each contentious subject is aligned to a
question of morality, and seeks to explain the darker qualities of human nature. Moreover,
Nazism continues to appear in popular culture as the great demon of modern civilization,
and survives primarily as a symbol of evil in the twenty-first century. Thus, it is evident
that for many historians and popular audiences alike, the fascination with Nazism is
undeniably linked to its associations with the meaning of evil.
The primary sources used for this thesis include written Nazi ideology, National
Socialist visual propaganda, and written works of anti-Nazi literature. Though each of
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these sources communicates its perspective in a distinct fashion, each also presents a clear
worldview in which the meaning of evil is given extensive explanation.
A different form of interpretation was also required for each type of source. In the
case of anti-Nazi literature, sources were read with the personal history of individual
authors in mind, and were regarded collectively as a patchwork of worldviews, each
seeking to explain in its own way the evil that had befallen society. For Nazi sources, the
combination of written ideology with visual propaganda was interpreted according to how
propagandists wanted people to seen the world, as dictated through the political aims of
their cause. Unlike the patchwork of ideas represented by anti-Nazi authors, Nazi sources
reflect a single set of ideas that were largely authorless. Besides Hitler's writings, Nazi
sources such as visual propaganda reveal little about the views of individuals, but express
a great deal about the political organization that spawned their creation.
Use of artistic sources provides the additional element of emotion to
interpretation, as sources from each perspective were meant to inspire a specific set of
feelings. Feeling can be a difficult sensation to communicate through words, as it requires
the sensation derived from experience. In this way, Nazi art served as a tool to
communicate the appropriate emotional sensation to German audiences. Its beauty (which
sometimes translates as uncanny-beauty to modern viewers), which often takes the form
of huge unwavering ultra-masculine men, conveys the intended grandeur of their ideas.
The massive scale and expense of such works also reflects the importance Hitler
attributed to appealing to the masses through their emotions rather than intellect.414
Conversely, the feeling communicated by anti-Nazi authors is tied to the intentional
414 For futher explanation, see pages 85-86.
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element of empathy they created between the reader and the fictional characters of their
literary imagination. Each author attempted to explain in his or her own way the evil that
had befallen society through Nazism's rise, and the sensations of fear, anger, disgust, and
sadness associated with the Third Reich was an important element of their intended
meaning.
Through these forms of interpretation, each type of source also comes to embody
the essential elements of their respective worldviews. For instance, a key theme of antiNazi literature presents the defence of individuality as crucial to acts of resistance against
tyranny, and in turn, the production of anti-Nazi literature represents real-life examples of
defiance against Nazi rule. Similarly, just as Nazi ideology promotes the empowerment of
the state, propaganda serves as evidence of the state's authority, which could control all
forms of media and enforced an appearance of universal support for Hitler's regime.
Furthermore, addition, the aspect of collective vision that inspired the creation of visual
propaganda reflects the Nazis' aim of creating a hive-like society driven by the people's
spirit of political enthusiasm and sense of communal identity. In short, just as anti-Nazi
literature embodies the resistance it advocates, Nazi propaganda embodies the the power
of the state and the mass consciousness it was deigned to help create.
A final element to be mentioned is the influence of hindsight on the interpretation
of sources. The Western bias of a twenty-first century Canadian perspective favours the
anti-Nazi worldview, and automatically views Nazi propaganda as evidence of wrongmindedness and injustice. This has the potential to influence the interpretation of sources
to the detriment of their intended meanings. For example, anti-Nazi literature became
highly valued after the Second World War as evidence of Germany's 'other self' that lived
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in defiance of Hitler's rule, and could easily be viewed somewhat gloriously as a symbol
of good triumphing over evil. However, this view deviates from the meaning of many
anti-Nazi works of literature, much of which concerns the failure of resistance, and the
triumph of evil. This is one reason why existential themes figure so prominently in these
works, for it is the hopelessness of the anti-Nazi struggle which forces Hitler's opponents
into a search for meaning. Conversely, it is easy to view Nazi propaganda in terms of its
hypocrisies and failures in logic, but this only distances interpretations from the
worldview that led to its creation.
While these considerations for the specific nature of sources played a vital role in
research, the purpose of this thesis was to explore manifestations of the Nazi and antiNazi worldviews, as demonstrated through the contents of their respective cultural
products. As such, the structure of arguments in the last three chapters has revolved
around common themes relating to perceptions evil, with the focus remaining fixated
upon the content of sources rather than their form.
By focusing on common themes, each chapter was designed to reveal a unique
aspect of each worldview, both through an independent examination of their respective
ideas and beliefs, and through the comparison of perspectives which followed. Each
chapter was divided into two halves, beginning with an exploration of the Nazi
worldview, followed by a discussion of comparative ideas appearing in anti-Nazi sources.
Consulting secondary sources also proved essential to this process, not only for providing
context, but for helping to explain why the differences in worldview might have existed.
Chapter one examined how either perspective envisioned evil as an all-powerful
and all-encompassing force that derived power from lies and survived through deceptive
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acts of manipulation. While the Nazis expressed this through their belief in an
international Jewish conspiracy, anti-Nazi authors directed similar criticisms against the
Nazi state for its use of lies, the corruption of justice, and for its perversion of basic
notions of moral decency. The purpose of this comparison was meant to highlight the
similarities in form which could exist between either perception of evil, despite extreme
differences in external worldview. It was concluded, therefore, that both worldviews were
responding to a common set of fears – namely the mistrust of information – and used the
concept of evil to explain the righteousness of their own cause.
Chapter two assessed themes relating to power and brutality, illustrating the stark
differences between the Nazi and anti-Nazi worldviews. One the one hand, Nazi theorists
envisioned weakness as a form of evil and celebrated power as the one true measure of
human worth. This was in the context of race, which identified Jewish weakness as the
cause for their parasitic and manipulative behaviour, and celebrated the physical power of
Aryans as the crucial element that might ensure racial survival according to the brutality
of natural law. By contrast, anti-Nazi authors took aim at the imbalance of power created
by the injustice of Hitler's rule, and identify power as an attribute of evil. The purpose of
this comparison was to highlight how the two sides understood the meaning of power in
relation to good and evil, which served to emphasize the underlying moral element
defining the difference between these opposing worldviews.
Lastly, the third chapter focuses on how each perspective envisioned life as a
struggle between good and evil. This comparison contrasts the utopian values of National
Socialism with the realistic perspectives taken by anti-Nazi authors. Whereas Nazi
sources attempt to show how their cause was noble and just, anti-Nazi sources attempt to
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explain how it wasn't. At its root, this disagreement stems from competing perspectives
on the value of individuality. While the Nazis were fixated upon the collective ideals that
accompanied their attempts to construct a mass consciousness based on race and Party
enthusiasm, a persistent theme of anti-Nazi literature celebrates individuality as a defence
of moral principles and the basis of ongoing resistance against tyranny.
The issue of individuality touches upon a key difference in worldview that extends
beyond the values portrayed in cultural works. The collective ideals of the Nazi
worldview reveals a rigidity to their understanding of reality which is comparatively
absent from anti-Nazi literature. From the perspective shown through Nazi culture, the
world was built on fixed rules, which their enemies were at fault for disobeying. The Jews
were presented in these terms as rule breakers on a racially determined level, whose
survival despite inherent weakness was used as evidence of having cheated natural law.
Thus, on a deeply ideological level, the Nazis' ideal form of human behaviour was to act
as rule followers.
By contrast, the behavioural ideal that most consistently appears in anti-Nazi
literature was to act according to the principles of moral goodness that all people knew
they should strive inwardly to achieve. Defiance for the sake of maintaining personal
integrity is promoted in these terms as the most important aspect of resistance. While
there is considerable diversity between the specific views of authors, there is a consistent
theme in which individuality carries with it an innate sense of goodness; this might
become clouded by fear, ambition, stupidity, duty, or hysteria, but it would still define the
core of human nature. Though there are a few cases where the sheer malevolence of
villainous characters subverts this sense of inner-goodness, the overwhelming impression
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made by anti-Nazi literature is that Nazism was experienced by individuals as a struggle
between good and evil, wherein the desire to be good was pitted against a lawless and
corrupt system driven by brutality and absolute power.
An underlying difference between each worldview's perception of reality is
revealed through this comparison. While the Nazis divided human beings into groups of
good or evil in rigidly defined terms of black and white, anti-Nazi authors present
humanity according to various shades of grey, and attribute evil to the complex mix of
individual circumstances that might influence behaviour. At the same time, Nazi ideology
presents an amoral worldview in which notions of good and evil were the artificial
constructions of civilization, and that natural law, race, and the struggle for survival were
the only things that mattered. Conversely, despite the moral ambiguity of the Anti-Nazi
worldview, authors present human decency and the desire for justice as innate
unbreakable properties, against which no amount of tyranny or cruelty could prevail in
the long-term. Two competing visions of the universe are revealed through these
differences, appearing as either an orderly existence built from a desire for society to
follow strict rules, or, as a chaotic existence built from the infinite number of
circumstances that might influence the choices of individuals to act in morally positive or
negative ways, according to their own inner sense of goodness.
To understand the significance of these views, Nazi and anti-Nazi sources must be
understood according to their respective values. For instance, since ideology should not
be used to explain the attitudes and opinions of ordinary people, it would be misguided to
assume Nazi propaganda represents the actual beliefs of those who supported the Nazi
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cause.415 Rather, the importance of the Nazi worldview to public opinion is in its role as
the official narrative guiding the interpretation of events on a national level. Whether the
principles of Nazism were sincerely believed by the masses or not, they would have had
an enormous influence on social behaviour as a result of the state's functionality, which
both expected and enforced obedience towards its positions. Moreover, the expertise of
Nazi propagandists appears to have been highly successful in bringing about the
psychological unity of the masses and instigating their participation in actions, which
more than compensated for any weaknesses in National Socialism as a political
philosophy.416
Along similar lines, it would be a mistake to interpret works of anti-Nazi literature
as evidence for an all-encompassing worldview that might be broadly applied to represent
'ordinary Germans', or even to the small sampling of authors used in this research. Since
the approach of this thesis focused on common themes, literary works were read in
relation to each other as sharing parts of a common perspective, but this should not be
construed to mean that authors were unified through their views in other ways. The true
value of anti-Nazi literature rests on the element of individuality it represents, which not
only serves as evidence of defiance against Hitler's rule, but sought to explain the
conditions which gave rise to Nazism, and the reasons people behaved as they did.
Of additional importance is the means of communication, for authors were not
only trained by profession to be skilled story-tellers, they possessed a remarkable
understanding of how the structures of power and human nature operated. Similar to the
415 Historian Christopher Browning makes note of the difficulties involved in assessing motivation, and the problematic assumptions
which connect propaganda to the actual beliefs of individuals. Browning, Ordinary Men, 159-175.
416 Ellul, Propaganda, 61.
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works of later historians, anti-Nazi literature can be understood as an attempt to
understand Nazism from an outsider's perspective, which predated any other
historiographical interpretation. This was made evident throughout this thesis, where the
views of authors came into line with works by later historians attempting to explain the
same subject.
The absence of the Holocaust as a subject within literary sources also represents
an important facet of their historical perspective, and marks a key difference between
anti-Nazi authors and later historians. The closeness of authors to the Nazi state meant
they did not have the benefit of hindsight to grasp the full scale of events, and as a
consequence, literary sources often explore the evils of Nazism without discussing the
Holocaust. While this does make them unreliable for expanding on the specific details of
historical fact, their focus on the underlying elements of the Nazi state without fixation on
the crushing horrors of Auschwitz allowed them to explore facets of Nazism that may
otherwise have been overlooked. In this vein, an issue that the Intentionalist school of
historiographical thought has been criticized for is its narrow field of vision, which seeks
to attribute a cause to the Holocaust that befits its scale as a crime. For such a perspective,
explanations offered by the likes of Hannah Arendt on the 'banality of evil' conflicted with
latent assumptions about the past.
With these attributes informing the comparison of sources, the conflict between
the Nazis and their opponents is revealed as a war of ideas, with propagandists and
creative fiction writers serving as experts of communication, each seeking to influence
the public through competing projections of worldview. Artistic works of Nazi culture
reveal the Nazis' self-perception of goodness, not only for the sense of Aryan superiority
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they were meant to convey, but for the classical aesthetics and utopian ideals they
celebrated. At the same time, anti-Nazi literature reveals that authors did not consider
belief in Nazism to be its primary threat. A greater evil by far was the phenomenon of
obedience and active support by the masses towards Nazi authorities, despite deep
feelings of moral objection against the style of their rule.
The true significance of evil within each of these worldviews relates generally to
the matter of perception. If it wasn't for the intervention of human perspective, the
objective world would exist without good or evil. Accordingly, the value and virtue of
people, ideas, and objects, are all decided through a process of subjective evaluation.
Useful or useless, beautiful or ugly, good or bad; all matters of human perception can be
understood in these terms as a matter of moral perspective. In this regard, the balance
between considerations for good and evil operate as the underlying element behind most
concerns of political thought. In relation to this thesis, cultural sources representing both
the Nazi and anti-Nazi perspectives demonstrate that both worldviews stemmed from a
belief that evil had befallen society, a notion which also lent meaning and purpose to each
of their respective political struggles. Since purpose is tied to action, and action was all
that mattered according to each worldview,417 the concept of evil can rightly be
understood as the crux of the divide between the Nazis and their intellectual opponents.
The meaning of evil is also tied to the legacy of Nazism, since it survives as a
symbol of evil throughout the modern world, due primarily to the horrific crimes they
committed while in power. Since the meaning of evil also informs the limitations on
acceptable forms of behaviour, it undoubtedly had an influence on the style of rule
417 See discussions on pages 43 and 103.
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adopted by Hitler's government, as well as the forms of resistance used by his opponents.
The long-term impact of twelve years of Nazi rule continues to shape the world,
both in its political dimension and in the domain of human self-perception. There is value
in this fact, as well as danger. Viewing Nazism as a form of evil teaches us to avoid the
follies of the past, to beware of political extremism, to reject racialist thinking, and to
consider the hazards of mass manipulation by governments. At the same time, the Nazi
state reveals unsettling truths about human behaviour, and the weaknesses inherent to
apparently civilized societies. The Nazis manipulated notions of evil in order to exploit
the emotions of the people, and their success remains a powerful testament to the
susceptibility of the masses to the control of a highly skilled propaganda organization. In
this modern age of information, the potential for organizations to communicate with the
public and influence behaviour has never been greater, and the capacity for perceptions of
evil to operate as a tool for successful mass manipulation should not be underestimated.
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Appendix A: Figures
Fig.1: [artist unknown], “Jewish Contress” from Der Stürmer (Issue #34, July 1934), ed. Julius
Streicher, accessed online:http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/sturmer.htm (Jan. 30, 2014).
Page copyright © 2001 by Randall Bytwerk. Caption: “Let the Goyim believe that we can be
Americans, Englishmen, Germans, or French. When our interests are at stake, we are always Jews,
and nothing but.”
Fig.2: [artist unknown], from Lustige Blätter (Issue #27, 1943), accessed online:
http://www.bytwerk.com/gpa/lustige.htm (Jan. 30, 2014). Page copyright © 2001 by Randall
Bytwerk. Caption: “The Polyp”
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Fig.3: [artist unknown], from Lustige Blätter (Issue #49, 1943), accessed online:
http://www.bytwerk.com/gpa/lustige.htm, Page copyright © 2001 by Randall Bytwerk. Caption:
“Nailed down.”
Fig. 4: [artist unknown], “Pressure from Above” from Der Stürmer (Issue #30, July 1944), ed.
Julius Streicher, accessed online: http://www.bytwerk.com/gpa/winstonchurchill.htm, Page
copyright © 2001 by Randall Bytwerk.
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Fig. 5: [artist unknown], from Simplicissimus, caption: “The campaign of lies. The democracies
have called on their most loyal troops to encircle Germany.”, date: April 9, 1939, accessed online:
http://research.calvin.edu/german-propaganda-archive/lehmann.htm, Page copyright © 2001 by
Randall Bytwerk.
Fig. 6: Entarte Musik (Degenerated music), poster for exhibition of degenerate music (1938). Page
copyright © 2001 by Randall Bytwerk. Caption: “An account by state council H. S. Ziegler, PhD.”
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Fig. 7: [artist unknown], from Der Stürmer (Issue #33, 1929), caption: “I can give him another
injection. In the state he's in, he won't notice anything at all.”, ed. Julius Streicher, accessed online:
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/sturm28.htm, Page copyright © 2001 by Randall
Bytwerk.
Fig. 8: [artist unknown], from Der Stürmer (March, 1929), caption: “Fatherland!”, ed. Julius
Streicher. Accessed online: http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/sturm28.htm, Page copyright
© 2001 by Randall Bytwerk.
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Fig. 9: [artist unknown], “The worm” from Der Stürmer (November, 1931), caption: “Where
something is rotten, the Jew is the cause.”, ed. Julius Streicher, accessed online:
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/sturm28.htm, Page copyright © 2001 by Randall
Bytwerk.
Fig. 10: [artist unknown], “Pan-Jewry,” from Der Stürmer, caption: “A frog sat in the green grass.
He didn't do this, he didn't do that, he didn't do anything at all. Blinded by the glitter of gold,
everyone flew into his mouth. Taken loosely from Boozmann.”, date: June, 1933 (Issue#25),
accessed online: http://research.calvin.edu/german-propaganda-archive/sturmer.htm, page
copyright © 2001 by Randall Bytwerk.
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Fig. 11: [artist unknown], “Jewish Culture” from Der Stürmer (August, 1929), caption: “The
natural and unnatural”, ed. Julius Streicher, accessed online:
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/sturm28.htm, Page copyright © 2001 by Randall
Bytwerk.
Fig. 12: [artist unknown], from Der Stürmer (July, 1929), caption: “The beginning [and] the end”,
ed. Julius Streicher, accessed online: http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/sturm28.htm, Page
copyright © 2001 by Randall Bytwerk.
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Fig. 13: [artist unknown], “Legion of Shame” from Der Stürmer (Issue #37, 1935), caption:
“Ignorant, lured by gold – They stand disgraced in Judah's fold. Souls poisoned, blood infected –
Disaster broods in their wombs.”, ed. Julius Streicher, accessed online:
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/sturmer.htm, Page copyright © 2001 by Randall Bytwerk.
Fig. 14: [artist unknown], “The Curse in the Blood” from Der Stürmer (Issue #43, October 1934),
Caption: “Every little Jewish baby grows up to be a Jew.”, ed. Julius Streicher, accessed online:
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/sturmer.htm, Page copyright © 2001 by Randall Bytwerk.
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Fig. 15: Vera Muhina (1889-1953), Peasant and Factory Worker Soviet Pavilion Paris Exposition,
1937, bronze, height: 12m, Art © Estate of Vera Mukhina / Licensed by Vaga, New York, NY.
Fig. 16: Albert Speer (architect), “Paris: German Pavillion: general view,” 1937, built for the Paris
Exhibition, Paris (France), ARTstor Slide Gallery, Data from: University of California, San Diego.
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Fig. 17: Arno Breker, The Guard, 1942, © Museum Arno Breker/MARCO-VG, Bonn
Toestemming publicatie.
Fig. 18: Arno Breker, Sacrifice (Opfer), 1940, sculptural relief, Wikimedia Commons, © Museum
Arno Breker/MARCO-VG, Bonn Toestemming publicatie.
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Fig. 19: A war-time poster aimed at foreign audiences, this one in Slovak portrays the Katyne
massacre. Accessed online: http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/ww2era.htm, page copyright
© 2001 by Randall Bytwerk.
Fig. 20: Leest Storm, Liberators, Caption: “De U.S.A. Zullen de Europese Kultuur van de
ondergang redden.” 1944, lithograph, © Koninklijke Bibliotheek/Nederlands Instituut voor
Oorlogsdocumentatie.
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Fig. 21: [artist unknown], from Lustige Blätter, Caption: “His way to ‘liberate’ Europe!”, (Issue
#37, 1944), accessed online: http://www.bytwerk.com/gpa/lustige.htm, Page copyright © 2001 by
Randall Bytwerk.
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Appendix B: Summary of Anti-Nazi Authors and Works
Clair Bergmann: Not much is known about Clair Bergmann, as she was a new author at
the time of publication for her novel, What Will Become of the Children (1932), and she
seems to have disappeared sometime during the Third Reich. Her novel tells the story of a
middle-class German family who struggle to overcome the economic and political
hardships of life during the last years of the Weimar Republic.
Heinrich Böll (1917-1985) was still a teenager when Hitler came to power, and was
conscripted into the German Wehrmacht during the Second World War where he was
wounded four times before being captured by American forces. In 1946, following his
release, he devoted himself to writing, and his early works (1946-1949) revolve around
his experiences as a soldier. Three of his short stories (“Children are Civilians Too,”
“Drinking in Petöcki,” and “That Time We Were in Odessa”) deal with the lone struggle
of enlisted men to enjoy life despite the crushing realities of war, and the maddening
absurdity of strict military authority. Another short story, titled “Stranger, Bear Word to
the Spartans We...”, focuses on the costs of war and of misleading ideology as a young
man awakes in a field-hospital bed, only to realize he is missing limbs, and he is being
treated in crumbled ruins of his old high school (where the destruction of war has now
reached). Similar themes are found in his novel, The Train was on Time, where a young
enlisted man wrestles with his fate as he rides a train with other soldiers towards the
ominous Eastern-front.
Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956) was an accomplished German playwright of international
renown. Due to his openly professed Marxist sympathies, he fled into exile after 1933 and
relocated frequently within Europe, eventually reaching the United States, where he
remained throughout the war. He maintained his vocal opposition of the Third Reich, and
completed numerous critical works, including Fear and Misery of the Third Reich,
Señora Carrar's Rifles, The Visions of Simone Machard, Schweyk in the Second World
War, and Mother Courage (amongst others). Fear and Misery of the Third Reich (written
1935-1938, first produced in 1938) is an openly-critical anti-Nazi play consisting of a
collection of vignettes portraying the various negative aspects of life under the Nazi rule.
Schweyk in the Second World War takes place in occupied-Prague, following the story of
a working-class, irreverent and playful individual who passively opposes Nazi officials by
making a mockery of their authority and performing false acts of collaboration. Though
this satirical narrative is at times lighthearted and playful, it is also bears deeply critical
meanings. The Visions of Simone Machard was written between 1942 and 1943 (cowritten by Lion Feuchtwanger), and takes aim at the lack of patriotism that undermined
efforts by the French to resist the German onslaught during the invasion of 1940. In
particular, the self-interested capitalists are criticized for seeking to benefit financially
from the new rulers. Simone is a girl who channels the spirit of Joan of Arc, and risks her
own life selflessly to sabotage the Germans, and is betrayed by her countrymen as a
result. However, she provides a positive example of how true French patriots should act,
with the implication that the French resistance would spring forth from similar roots.
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Hans Fallada (1893-1947, born Rudolf Wilhelm Friedrich Ditzen) was an accomplished
author who suffered throughout his life from psychological distress and substance abuse,
and spent time on separate occasions in prisons and sanatoriums. He remained in
Germany throughout the era of Nazi rule and remained neutral in his stance towards the
regime, collaborating with them on some literary projects. In his personal life he suffered
mentally under the Nazis, and wrote in secret his heavily autobiographical The Drinker
while incarcerated for the attempted murder of his wife, and completed Every Man Dies
Alone immediately following Germany's defeat at the end of the Second World War. First
published in 1947, Every Man Dies Alone was written in a twenty-four day span
following the Second World War, as the author struggled with depression and relapses of
narcotics abuse. The narrative follows the story of Otto and Anna Quangel who resist
Nazi authority through the distribution of anonymous postcards with anti-Nazi statements
written on them in the streets of Berlin, and the investigations of the Gestapo who close
on their prey. The events and characters are based on the true story of Otto and Elise
Hampel who were found guilty of treason and executed by beheading in March, 1943.
The Drinker was written in 1944 while the author was incarcerated at Alt-Sterlitz prison
for the attempted murder of his wife. Fallada wrote The Drinker in a code which was not
deciphered until after the war, and was not published until 1950. The novel is heavily
autobiographical and relates the story of a grocery owner who falls on hard times and
quickly destroys his life's work by becoming an alcoholic, squandering his savings, and
abusing his wife. This is followed by his incarceration in prison and eventual committal to
an insane asylum, where he purposefully infects himself with tuberculosis in order that he
should die.
Lion Feuchtwanger (1884-1858) was a German-Jewish author and playwright who was
heavily critical of Hitler and the Nazi Party several years before they gained power. After
1933 he fled to France where he was briefly interned before continuing his flight to the
United States. He remained productive and critical throughout the period of Hitler's rule,
and collaborated briefly with other anti-Nazi writers. One of his works titled The
Oppermanns (first published in 1934) relates the story of a fictional German-Jewish
family living in Berlin during the Nazis' ascendency. Of the works studied for this thesis,
this novel offers the most direct commentary on Antisemitism. The Oppermanns are
meant to portray a typical Jewish family, the principle characters being Gustav (an
academic and cultured man), Martin (a business man and furniture store owner), and
Berthold (a teenage student); together their lives reflect the hardships faced by Jews
during this era. As a commentary on the contemporary social environment, portrayals of
various collaborators, opportunists, and ideological Nazis are also included. In designing
the Nazis, the author notes in the preface that he drew inspiration from Hitler's Mein
Kampf. A second of Feuchtwanger's novels was included in this research, called Double,
Double, Toil and Trouble in the English translation. It was first published in 1943 and
relates the story of Oscar Lautensack, a stage magician and psychic who struggles
between the noble calling of his gift, and the ignoble satisfactions of greed and ambition
offered by his Nazi peers. Set on the eve of Hitler's assumption of power, it is a novel that
focuses on individual culpability amidst an environment ruled by fear and terror. Oscar's
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character is also used as a commentary on the character of Adolf Hitler. Oscar sacrifices
his artistic integrity in exchange for the rewards fame and wealth in collaborating with the
Nazis. Ultimately, this collaboration proves his undoing, and he is betrayed.
Ernst Jünger (1895-1998) began a military career early in life after running away from
school to join the Foreign Legion African Divisions. In 1914 he volunteered for military
service, was commissioned as an officer, and became a highly decorated veteran after
being wounded several times in the trenches. He recorded his experiences in his 1920
novel, Stahlgewittern ('The Storm of Steel'), which became his most famous and widely
read work. Though Jünger retained some similar 'blood and soil' nationalist ideals as the
Nazis and was celebrated by them as a hero, he became disillusioned with the tyranny of
Hitler's regime. This criticism of tyranny is evident in his 1939 novel, On Marble Cliffs,
which also reveals elements of the nihilism that Jünger struggled with throughout life. On
Marble Cliffs is an example of subversive literature which criticizes Hitler and the Third
Reich using the veil of a semi-historical setting. The narrative is set in a pristine natural
landscape that incorporates elements of history and fantasy, called 'The Great Marina',
which is threatened by the rise of a tyrant called the 'Chief Ranger'. The novel was
published in 1939 in Germany and despite being recognized for its subversive
commentary, the author was not punished.
Klaus Mann: Born in Munich, Germany, Klaus Mann (1906-1949) was the son of famed
novelist, Thomas Mann. He fled into exile after 1933 and became an American citizen.
He served with the United States Army as a reporter in post-war Germany. One of his
more notable exile works, Mephisto is set in Germany at the end of the Republic, and
extends to the early Nazi years. The novel follows the career of theatre-actor Hendrik
Höfgen who advances himself enormously by cooperating with the Nazi authorities. The
story is based on the actual career of the author's former brother-in-law, Gustaf
Gründgens, a former communist turned Nazi sympathizer who enjoyed the patronage of
senior Nazi officials. The book was later the subject of a lawsuit over this legacy.
Thomas Mann (1875-1955) was a German novelist and social critic of enormous success
and fame who frequently drew on Germany's literary, theological, and philosophical
traditions in his works. After 1933, Thomas Mann went into exile, first to Switzerland and
then to the United States, where he became leading proponent of 'exile literature' which
opposed Hitler's regime. Unlike the experiences of many other exiles, Mann enjoyed
considerable fame upon his arrival on foreign soil. He began writing his anti-Nazi novel,
Doctor Faustus: The Life of the German Composer Adrian Leverkühn, during the Second
World War but it was not completed until 1947. This work tells the story of a fictional
German composer of incredible talent who strives for greatness but contracts syphilis and
slips towards insanity. The story takes inspiration from the story of Faust. It is narrated
through the recollections of a writer who lives in Germany during the Third Reich.
Erika Mitterer: Austrian-born Erika Mitterer (1906-2001) did not flee into exile during
the era of Nazi rule. Instead, she wrote coded criticisms of the state using historical
fiction as her guise. Her novel, The Prince of Darkness (first published in Hamburg,
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1940) is set in medieval Germany and relates the story of two female protagonists
(Hiltrud, a minor noble who changes her name to Maria upon joining a convent, and
Theresa, her innocent and beautiful younger sister) who fall victim to Church and
patriarchical authorities during an inquisition, and the rational Dr. Fabri who tries in vain
to help them. The guise of historical fiction was successful in masking the critical intent
of the novel, and was read by opponents of the regime as a political/social critique aimed
at contemporary events.
Theodor Plievier (1892-1955) fled to Russia during the Second World War and
witnessed the civilian struggle in Moscow during 1941-1942. The following year, he read
the personal correspondences of captured German letters, and conducted interviews with
German prisoners of war following the battle of Stalingrad. His novel, Stalingrad,
documents the struggle for survival faced by German soldiers in the Hellish landscape of
the Eastern Front. The account focuses on groups of soldiers as they struggle to survive.
As a political critique, the novel lays considerable blame on the Nazi leadership, as well
as the military command for their obedience towards “insane” superiors.
Erich Maria Remarque (1891-1970) was conscripted for military service in 1917 and
then wounded while serving on the Western front during the First World War. He became
a prominent writer afterwords, producing his most famous anti-war novel, All Quiet on
the Western Front. He fled into exile in 1933, and his works were banned and publicly
burned by the Nazis during their great cultural purge. His novel, Arch of Triumph, (first
published in 1945) follows the story of Ravic, a German exile living in Paris on the eve of
the Second World War. The cynical Ravic is a surgeon who struggles with his past (as a
victim of torture in a concentration camp) and seeks revenge on the Nazi interrogator who
tormented him.
Anna Seghers (1900-1983) was of Jewish descent, was married to a known communist,
and had been critical of the Nazi Party before their assumption of power, marking her fit
for persecution after 1933. After a brief period of imprisonment, she fled into exile (first
to France, and then Mexico) where she continued to voice her opposition to the Third
Reich through literature. Her novel titled The Seventh Cross (first published in 1942) tells
the story of a group of concentration camp escapees who are one-by-one hunted down by
police and an unsympathetic public and returned to prison for further torture and eventual
execution. The narrative focuses on George Heisler (an escapee) and his comrade Franz
Marnet (a fellow member of a leftist resistance group) as the two work towards George's
eventual escape.
Arnold Zweig: After serving on the Western Front during the First World War, Arnold
Zweig (1887-1968) became a pacifist and academic. This, in addition to being a Jew,
made Zweig a natural target for persecution and as a result he went into exile after 1933.
He eventually settling in Palestine after relocating several times within Europe. Written in
1943, his novel The Axe of Wandsbek was inspired by a report read by the author in 1938.
The narrative follows master-butcher Albert Teetjen and his wife Stine, who, after
collaborating with the Nazis and collecting a payment in return for conducting several
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executions, become ostracized from their community and fall into disgrace; the disloyal,
opportunistic, and indecent character of the Nazi Party is revealed in the process.
Stefen Zweig (1881-1942) was a renowned German-Jewish author, playwright and
journalist. He became a pacifist during the First World War, and he would remain so for
the remainder of his life. After fleeing into exile, Zweig and his wife committed suicide
together in 1942. First published in 1942, his novella The Royal Game tells the story of a
reclusive Austrian chess master aboard a transport ship off the coast of South America.
The chess master had been arrested by the Nazis and held in solitary confinement and
interrogated repeatedly, eventually causing a mental break to occur due to his isolation.
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